Speculative Fiction

Michael Flynn

The Wreck of the River of Stars

There are many reasons for this. The writing is extremely awkward at times; unfocused and peppered with authorial asides and pointless digressions. The characters and their interactions with one another are complex, but unrealistic, bordering on the dysfunctional even before things start to go wrong. Subplots meander about the novel with little connection to one another and little conclusion by the end. But perhaps most damning, the tale promises at least a temporary glory, a romantic ideal of a ship sailing the solar wind, yet fails even to deliver that. The entire exercise is tawdry and futile.

The premise is simple: ships fly between the planets by means of a traditional "fusion torch" or the somewhat more elegant "solar sail" (formed with a ring of superconductive material and a magnetic field). The sailing ships harken back to the days of ships sailing the oceans of earth, complete with islands to avoid, currents to navigate, and rigging to tend... and just like the steamships on Earth, ships with the "fusion torch" drive rendered the entire technology obsolete.

The River of Stars is a hybrid vessel, carrying both a solar sail and a retrofitted fusion torch drive. The ship was once well-known, the most famous of the solar sail spacecraft, but the new drive system brought about a dramatic reversal of fortune; with its sails permanently stowed, the River of Stars limps from port to port, slowly descending into obsolescence.

Until the fusion torch drive fails midway to Jupiter.

While the chief engineer struggles to repair the fusion torch, the token solar sail crew plot to unfurl their sails and ride into port upon the solar wind. They hope that one last, desperate gesture will save their lives and restore the glory of their ship in its day.

It's a compelling summary, but unfortunately the implementation doesn't reach any of those lofty heights. This one's not worth it.

Resident Evil

Most of the time, movies based off of video games are dismally bad, horrendously low-budget creations with little redeeming value. This one, however, stands out from the pack. While it is definitely low-budget (and clearly, most of the budget was spent on a particular CGI creature), most of the time that doesn't show. The actors are competent if not exceptional, and the action comes fast and furious. The plot is significantly more complex that should be expected from a video game adaptation.

Even so, don't go to this movie looking for high-gloss action or great one-liners. It's pure humans-versus-zombies fun. Definitely a B movie, but a well-done B movie that deserves praise for scoring well above expectations.

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