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Rory McRory Fitzrory

(23 posts)
Tue Jan 1, 2019, 07:31 AM Jan 2019

2019: The Year of "Blade Runner"

And yet there are no flying cars, no off-world colonies, no attack ships heading for Orion, and no Replicants.

It's something I refer to as Fast-Forward Future Syndrome, in which a movie, TV series, novel, etc., features a setting not far into the future wherein humanity has nonetheless made centuries of progress. 2001: A Space Odyssey and its quasi-sequel 2010 both suffer from it, as does the Planet of The Apes remake starring Mark Wahlberg, set in 2029. The year 2032 is the setting for Demolition Man, where characters refer to the 1990s as Ancient Times!

Books and TV haven't fared much better (remember Space: 1999?) Even Jem, one of my favorite sci-fi novels, is guilty of this sin, as is Ben Bova's Millennium, another great read.

There are many, many more examples that I can't think of right now, cuz I haven't gone to bed yet and am shitfaced. If anyone here can refresh my memory, I would greatly {hiccup!} appreciate it. Happy New Year to all.

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2019: The Year of "Blade Runner" (Original Post) Rory McRory Fitzrory Jan 2019 OP
Escape from New York: 1997. Released in 1981. Dave Starsky Jan 2019 #1
Perhaps the grandaddy of them all: "1984". n/t Mister Ed Jan 2019 #2
The Manchurian Candidate came true in unexpected ways. gordianot Jan 2019 #3
I'm thinking "Time after Time", you know the old TV series ... marble falls Jan 2019 #4
The original 1975 "Rollerball", in which the entire world is run by corporations, Aristus Jan 2019 #5

Dave Starsky

(5,914 posts)
1. Escape from New York: 1997. Released in 1981.
Tue Jan 1, 2019, 08:29 AM
Jan 2019

Manhattan still hasn't become a maximum security prison, though it may feel like it sometimes.

gordianot

(15,273 posts)
3. The Manchurian Candidate came true in unexpected ways.
Tue Jan 1, 2019, 09:05 AM
Jan 2019

It did not take torture conditioning but greed. We now have to live along with our own people who in another time would have been considered mortal enemies. Soviet Communism rebranded and with stealth won the Cold War without a shot.

marble falls

(57,900 posts)
4. I'm thinking "Time after Time", you know the old TV series ...
Tue Jan 1, 2019, 09:17 AM
Jan 2019

where the main character shows up week after week as someone else.

Aristus

(66,590 posts)
5. The original 1975 "Rollerball", in which the entire world is run by corporations,
Tue Jan 1, 2019, 12:34 PM
Jan 2019

was set in, I think, 2015.

War, crime, and poverty are things of the past. But everyone must obey their corporate masters. To sublimate the energy needed to start a worker's revolution, the corporations invent a violent, full-contact sport, Rollerball, in which the players, on skates or driving small motorcycles, can and often do kill one another for possession of the ball. The sickening violence not only placates the fans, but also tends to kill off strong, healthy, competitive young men with leadership potential, thus preventing insurrection.

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