Ariel, by Steven R Boyett part 2

July 11th, 2009

I finally finished reading Ariel, by Steven R Boyett.  It took me about two months because I only read during my lunch hour, but it was worth it.  As I mentioned in my last post about Ariel, I had read it before, but it was probably about 25 years ago, near when it first came out.  It turned out that I really didn’t remember any of the details, which was a good thing since it was like reading it for the first time.

It’s a novel of The Change, similar to the “apocalypse” in S.M. Stirling’s The Sunrise Lands, though it goes a bit further.  Not only do electricity and gunpowder and such stop working, but magic returns to the world, complete with magical creatures like gryphons and the unicorn, Ariel.

The story follows Ariel, and her companion, Pete, from Atlanta to New York City, and an assault on the Empire State Building.  It’s got the elements of a great near-future post-apocalypse story, but throws in just enough swords and sorcery to keep it interesting.

The ebook version I read seems to be the 1999 reprint, which included an author’s afterword.  In it, he states emphatically and repeatedly that there will never be a sequel to Ariel.  I found that interesting since I had already read that there is a sequel, Elegy Beach, that’s scheduled to come out in November.  It takes place 30 years after the events of Ariel, in California, so I’m not sure how closely related it is. The site for the book has a countdown timer on it saying it will go live in mid-September, and is supposed to include downloads, maps, audio, forums and more.

Ariel is going to be re-released in paperback on August 25th.  I give a hearty recommendation, and am really looking forward to getting back into that universe with the next book.

Ariel, by Steven R Boyett

Weekly Twitter Updates for MEGATØN

July 5th, 2009
  • Finally listened to Through the Aftermath podcast ep12 which included an email from me. Still a thrill to hear my name on the internets. #
  • Just watched the Irish zombie comedy Boy Eats Girl on the Roku, and really liked it. Very Shawn of the Dead'ish. http://is.gd/1hMT7 #
  • Listened to ep3 of Broken Sea's audio drama Escape from New York. They're doing a great job on this one. http://brokensea.com/efny/ #
  • Speaking of Broken Sea, they finished a 6ep arc of classic Battlestar Galactica. Was waiting to get all at once. http://brokensea.com/bsg/ #
  • The Colony on Discovery Channel could be great, if they don't screw it up. I have high hopes. http://is.gd/1jJ12 #
  • Hat tip to Third Coast Zed for turning me on to Sundered, a post-apocalyptic story podcast series, http://sunderednovel.com/ #
  • Thought the #p-a short film Vespers was excellent. Plague wipes out 1880 London, very well done. http://is.gd/1mZkq (only 5 mins long) #

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Weekly Twitter Updates for MEGATØN

June 28th, 2009
  • Just finished downloading Logan's Run- The Complete Epic Series ;) Anyway, 13 episodes, don't remember how epic they were but should be fun. #
  • Neat list of five early armageddon films from the early 80s. I had never heard of a couple of them. http://is.gd/19Cm1 #
  • Watched episode 1 of Logan's Run. Started out as a rehash of the movie with a tweaked mythology. Really cool so far. #
  • Found on the Through the Aftermath forums, http://zombiestories.wordpress.com/ New zombie short story every day of the week. #

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Life As We Knew It

June 26th, 2009

I just finished the audiobook of Life As We Knew It by Susan Beth Pfeffer, and really enjoyed it.  It’s a fairly short young adult novel that takes place in the months following a world-wide catastrophe caused by the moon being knocked out of its orbit by a passing meteor.  This causes tsunami, earthquakes and volcanoes sprouting up all over the world.  None of this affects our main characters directly, but it does cause a breakdown of civilization, complete with no more food deliveries, or gas and electricity.

The story is told first-person by Miranda, a sixteen year old girl, writing in her diary. We get an entry about every day or so, with the occasional break of a few days. When things start to look like they could go bad, Miranda’s mother is smart enough to stock up on food and other supplies.  This turns out to be just about the last food they’ll have available for most of the story.  Through Miranda’s diary, we then get to hear how the family survives through the winter, made much worse than normal by skies grayed with dust from volcanoes.

I did like the book, but whether on purpose or not, it avoids what I would expect to be the more realistic aspects of this kind of situation.  I mean it’s clearly a young adult book, and so it feels a little soft.

For example, Miranda and her family are slowly starving to death as they try to stretch their food supplies through the winter.  They’re skipping meals to make their food last longer, but they consider going back to school when it opens, and waste time and energy on things like going ice skating.  They did spend a lot of time preparing stocks of firewood, but there’s not one mention of trying to go hunting or even fishing.  They live near woods so there must be wild animals of some sort nearby, or a stream with fish in it.  They never even get a gun for their own protection.  Though it turns out they wouldn’t need one, because there’s barely any mention of looting or any violence at all.  If I was in a town full of starving people I’d expect theft, looting, even murder as people did anything to stay alive.

In one scene near the end Miranda comments about how many houses she sees with no signs of life, and she mentions that some of the people left, but that some must have died of illness.  I was screaming at the cd player in my car that if they didn’t starve to death, there’s probably food in those houses.  And at the very least, the dead bodies themselves would be preserved by the cold, though I guess those kinds of ideas wouldn’t be in an 8th grade novel.

So overall, it’s not The Road, but it was very enjoyable.  The author has written a companion novel, The Dead and the Gone, which takes place in the same universe during the same catastrophe, though it focuses on how a group of characters in New York City survive.  That one is supposed to be “grittier” so hopefully I’ll like it even more.

Watched O-bi, O-ba – Koniec cywilizacji

June 26th, 2009

O-bi, O-ba – Koniec cywilizacji is one of those foreign language post-apocalyptic films I discovered on the IMDB list of post-apocalytic media.  (I think it’s Polish, but I’m not sure.) I couldn’t download it, so I picked up a copy of the DVD on Ebay.  It cost less than $10 delivered, so I’m not sorry I bought it, but the movie was just ok.

It takes place one year after a nuclear war forces approximately 2000 survivors into a series of undergound bunkers, protected by some kind of dome that keeps out the fallout and nuclear winter.  To give the people hope, those in charge spread the story of the Ark, a space ship kind of thing that will come and take everyone off of Earth to safety.

The look and feel of the film was great; the bunker they lived in was totally believable.  There was lots of concrete and brick, and dripping exposed pipe.  But overall the movie was just too strange for me.  All of the characters were more or less insane, and the fact that everyone was looking forward to being rescued by the Ark, and going to live in space wasn’t very believable.

So if you happen to acquire a copy of it, it’s watchable, but I woudn’t spend the time looking for it.

Weekly Twitter Updates for MEGATØN

June 21st, 2009

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Weekly Twitter Updates for MEGATØN

June 14th, 2009
  • Kontraband.com's 15 Great Post-Apocalytic Movies. Gotta love a list that includes Wall-E and When the Wind Blows. http://is.gd/SAlk #
  • Just watched the first episode of History Channel's series Life After People. It was really good. Like the 2-hr special, but more detail. #
  • http://twitpic.com/73u7j – Rockin' a sweet Thundarr wallpaper on my Palm Pre. Thanks to Ren McKinzie, the artist. renmckinzie.com #
  • Got audio books of How I Live Now and Life as we knew it from the library, looking forward to both of them. #
  • Bought O-bi, O-ba – Koniec cywilizacji. Polish post-apocalyptic film, 1985. http://is.gd/11lDo Need to hack my dvd player to be region free #
  • Just watched episode 1 of Ark II, post-apocalyptic kids show from the 70's. Horrible but awesome, I love it. http://is.gd/11psm #

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Watched Письма мёртвого человека (Dead Man’s Letters)

June 13th, 2009

I was browsing the Internet Movie DataBase the other day, and noticed they had a list of media with a keyword of “post-apocalyptic”.  I filtered it by “movie”and started scanning the list until I got to one I didn’t recognize, Pisma myortvogo cheloveka from 1986 (Dead Man’s Letters, or Letters from a Dead Man in English).  I’ve mentioned a couple times recently that I’m interested in non-American post-apocalyptic stories, so the prospect of a undiscovered, highly-rated, foreign-language PA movie really grabbed my attention.

I took a look at Ebay, but only found a region 2 DVD available, so headed off to torrentz.com to find it.  I went for the larger of the two versions I found, and it took over a week for it to come down.  Luckily, it’s a DVD .iso, so it’s complete with the English subtitles.

I finally got to watch it tonight, and it’s hard to put into words how I felt about it.  I mean I loved it, but at the same time, it was such a downer, I can’t say I felt good while watching it.  I saw a forum post that called this “the Russian Threads” and in some regards, they’re right.  This movie is just as depressing, and has the same lack of any kind of positive overtones. But it goes even further than Threads in that it’s filmed in a kind of sepia-colored grainy black and white that totally matches the settings.

There appears to be some debate about where the movie is supposed to take place.  I’ve seen forum posters say Russia, an Eastern European country, and even the United States.  I assumed it was Russia, but the characters did use several Christian references, and there was even a priest character, which I thought was strange given our stereotype of the “Godless communists”.   It takes place an undetermined time, probably several months, after a nuclear war, which is started by accident.  The survivors live in the basements and lower levels of buildings, while outside on the surface is nothing but utter devastation; destroyed and collapsed buildings, ash and dust.

For the length of the film, we get to watch the main character, a Nobel Prize winning scientist, and a few colleagues slowly die, whether from war-related causes or by their own hands, or abandon each other to their fates, while we’re told that only the young and strong are allowed to go to the “central bunker” where the plan is to stay underground for 30 years.  Our characters are neither, so we never see the inside of that bunker.

Some have said that the final scene offers a glimmer of hope, but given how the rest of the events in the story went, I wouldn’t be too hopeful of a good outcome.  (Though now that I think about it, there was a voiceover that suggested a certain outcome. I may have to watch that part again.) But in any case, if you’re a fan of the genre, you have to try to track this one down.  The acting was great, and the settings themselves were awesome.  I can’t recall seeing a more devastated cityscape in a movie before.

One final note about something I found interesting.  In the final credits, there’s a note that says “Thanks to the Committee of Soviet Scientists for Peace Against Nuclear Threat.”  I did some Googling, and apparently that group put out a book called The Night After–: Climatic and Biological Consequences of a Nuclear War: Scientists’ Warning in 1983.  I suppose the film makers used their descriptions of what the effects of a war would be in their planning.  And I found it interesting that while we (Americans) stereotypically supposed the Russians wanted nothing more than to nuke all of us Yankees to dust, there was actually a group in their own society who campaigned against that possibility.

ps  I’m not sure if my download was bad or what, but twice in the movie it just skipped forward about five minutes.  I didn’t realize at first that I could rewind back to the skipped over minutes.  So if you download it and think you’re missing something, try rewinding to check.  I almost missed the scene of the bombs falling, which was done really well.

Watched Damnation Alley

June 1st, 2009

I was browsing through my Netflix Watch Instantly queue and couldn’t find anything I really felt like watching, so I decided to give Amazon’s Video on Demand service a try on my Roku.  The ordering process turned out to be totally painless.  I don’t recall connecting my Roku to my Amzon account, but I must have done so back when the service first came out.  I just browsed Amazon for a video I wanted to watch, paid for it, and then it appeared in the Amazon “My Library” menu on the Roku.

Unfortunately, the first movie I chose to watch was Ill Generation.  I suppose it’s an accomplishment to complete a full-length film on practically no budget, but in this case I had to wonder why they even bothered.  Granted I only gave it about 10 minutes, but I couldn’t handle anymore.  I only lost $3 on the deal.

Since it was still early I decided to give it another try and ordered a rental of Damnation Alley for $4.  I didn’t realize it at the time, but this movie has never been relesed on DVD, so the only way you could watch it until recently was on TV, VHS, or downloading the torrent, that is until it was added to Amazon just a week or so ago.  Again, after I paid for it, it instantly appeared on my Roku, and the quality was great.  I had forgotten how cheesy the movie was, but how can you not like a movie with killer armor-plated cockroaches?

Interestingly, I had always thought (or mis-remembered actually) that the Landmaster vehicle in Damnation Alley was the same vehicle as was in Ark II, the Saturday morning live-action show from the 70’s about a group of scientists traveling around a post-apocalyptic landscape.  Turns out the trucks were completely different, both made specifically for their shows.

And speaking of Ark II, I hadn’t noticed that the entire series of 15 episodes is available on DVD.  I’m going to go ahead and Netflix them.  Not sure if I’ll watch them right away, but will at least make copies and send them back.

They’ll go along great with my Captain Power and the Soldiers of the Future DVDs that I haven’t gotten around to watching yet.

Weekly Twitter Updates for MEGATØN

May 31st, 2009
  • Just watched the zombie short film I Love Sarah Jane on my Popcorn Hour, and loved it. Way cool. http://is.gd/D2cx #
  • Very cool 90 second short film, They Will Come to Town. Even if you don’t agree with the message, the “story” is awesome. http://is.gd/D6g8 #
  • If you missed Life After People – The Series on History Channel, they’re doing a mini marathon tonightand again tomorrow. http://is.gd/EiYY #
  • Just watched The Time of the Wolf on the Roku. Very strange, not sure if I liked it or not. Was cool, but ended abruptly. http://is.gd/Etm2 #
  • Just scored 18/20 on a Post-Apocalyptic Novels quiz, and I’d quibble about one of the wrong answers, http://is.gd/FGDc. Now on to part 2. #
  • Part 2 was harder, got a 16 out of 20. http://is.gd/FHsh #
  • 10 Scariest Eco-Catastrophes from Early Science Fiction http://is.gd/HQ9T Not specifically labeled as post-apocalyptic, but most seam to be. #
  • Heh, Twitter needs spell check… #
  • List of the supposed best post-apocalyptic films ever, http://is.gd/ItnS. Obviously they haven’t seen Threads, and why is Testament there? #
  • Just watched The Day the Earth Caught Fire from 1961 http://is.gd/JK6C Was really very good; great dialog, felt like an episode of West Wing #
  • Came across @in_the_ruins and http://intheruins.com/. If you’re into post-apocalyptic topics, check him out. #

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