Tuesday 3 March 2015

Bad Military Science Fiction

I love military science fiction, but the truth is, you could probably read all of the really good examples of the genre in a year or so, and exhaust all of the movies in an explosion-filled long weekend. So, to keep experiencing the genre, I am forced to look to lesser works, in the dwindling hope of finding a lost treasure.  Here are two examples of lesser works that I have recently experienced.

Live. Die. Repeat

This Tom Cruise movie did so bad at theatres, that when they released it on DVD they changed the title from Edge of Tomorrow to the original tag line, Live. Die. Repeat. Secretly, I was hoping that the lack of success of this movie was mainly a reaction of the last Tom Cruise sci-fi ‘blockbuster’, Oblivion, which was truly a piece of space poo. Well, this movie was better than that one, but not by a lot.

The plot is basically Groundhog Day meets alien invaders. While this is amusing and interesting for the first 45 minutes or so, it quickly becomes obvious that the idea works much better in comedy than it does in action. In fact, it is a self-defeating idea. If you can live the same day over and over, changing things until you get them right, then there is no threat. Yes, at some point the repeat cycle is broken, but only after I had quit caring. It’s just as well; the second half of the movie is much worse than the first, becoming such a by-the-numbers Hollywood action movie that I actually groaned a couple of times.

Probably the biggest disappoint for me was the infantry battlesuits which gives the movie its distinctive look. These prove to be mostly irrelevant to the story, in fact they are discarded before the end. However, for most of the time they are on screen, they look kind of ridiculous. Only the main characters are actually shown to be combat effective in them, and Tom Cruise only in the later part of the movie. Everyone else looks weighed-down and generally immobile. This is believable enough, obviously they are trying to turn a soldier into a tank, but if this is the case, why are they using them like infantry, in a D-Day-like assault the beaches attack, where the suits are more harm than good?  

It is now safe to say that Tom Cruise has used up all of the sci-fi goodwill he got from War of the Worlds.

Major by Rick Shelly

In the world of literature, I just finished reading Major by Rick Shelly. This is book four of a seven book series that follows a mercenary soldier up through the ranks. I have not read the earlier books, but this didn’t make any major difference to the plot. That said, if I had read the earlier books, I wonder if I ever would have made it to this one.

Rick Shelly is not a bad wordsmith, in fact, his prose was so smooth and engaging that it kept me reading a lot longer than the plot warranted. The truth is, very little happens in the book. The first four chapters are taken up with the main character sitting on a court martial. It’s interesting enough, but there are no real twists, no surprises, and the whole thing proves irrelevant to the rest of the book. Several chapters of family life and day-to-day routine later, the hero is finally sent out on assignment. A chapter in transport. A chapter meeting the guys who hired him. A chapter looking over the temporary barracks. A chapter meeting the officer in charge of the men he’s hired to train... well you get the idea. By the time there was some action, I’d kind of dozed off. 

I accept that this book is probably a decently accurate version of what a soldier’s life is really like, but I’m not reading this kind of book to hear about ordinary days!

Well, I’ll keep looking.

6 comments:

  1. I'd recommend you try the book Edge of Tomorrow was based on, if you want a better version of it. It's fairly short, Japanese, and has an infinitely better title - seriously, what were they thinking, not calling the film "All You Need Is Kill"? The film changed the whole setting, characters and plot quite a bit, and not for the better.

    I did like Tom Cruise getting hit by a truck though.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It's still not remotely hard-military though. It's just easier to deal with when it's more anime-inspired and not trying (for some reason) to look all gritty and realistic.

      Delete
  2. I quite enjoyed it and Oblivion....But each to there own :)

    ReplyDelete
  3. Simon, in both cases, I enjoyed the first half of the movies, but for some reason, they just couldn't hold my attention.

    The part where Tom Cruise is hit by the truck is hilarious, but it goes to show how the whole idea works better for a comedy.

    ReplyDelete
  4. For Military Sci-fi try Marine by Jay Allen.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I like Tom Cruise being hit by a truck. With a different leading man, it would just have been better.

    The people who adapted it show some bizarre choices that a half decent project manager would have picked up, rather than a military advisor (why land on a beach if you fly all the way ?) or physicist (if you ultimately re-set it every time, surely the hive thingy would re-set to a point where it was still alive ?). Too much bollocks, not enough common sense.

    ReplyDelete