My Dots for Tuesday, August 14, 2007
An appraisal of where one reporter places Philip K. Dick among the literary/writerly pantheon.
Quoted: Of all American writers, none have got the genre-hack-to-hidden-genius treatment quite so fully as Philip K. Dick, the California-raised and based science-fiction writer who, beginning in the nineteen-fifties, wrote thirty-six speed-fuelled novels, went crazy in the early seventies, and died in 1982, only fifty-three. His reputation has risen through the two parallel operations that genre writers get when they get big. First, he has become a prime inspiration for the movies, becoming for contemporary science-fiction and fantasy movies what Raymond Chandler was for film noir: at least eight feature films, including “Total Recall,†“Minority Report,†“A Scanner Darkly,†and, most memorably, Ridley Scott’s “Blade Runner,†have been adapted from Dick’s books, and even more—from Terry Gilliam’s “Brazil†to the “Matrix†series—owe a defining debt to his mixture of mordant comedy and wild metaphysics.
[tags: Science Fiction, author, books, thepugetnews]
The trailer for this movie shows a spooky look at a fringe community living life in the American desert. It looks like it will explore issues of violence, frontier justice, and isolation.
I’d love to check this out.
[tags: documentary, movies, film, trailer, video, thepugetnews]



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