MOVIE WATCHING GUIDE

Films from the Future
 

 

HARDCOVERKINDLE

Films from the Future provides a great combination of entertainment, education, and the chance to watch (or re-watch) some great (or at least, engaging)science fiction movies — all of which are available to stream online!

When watched/read together, the book and the films take the reader/viewer on a journey that touches on everything from genetic engineering and cloning, to 3D organ printing, cyborgs, artificial intelligence, alien life, and a whole lot more — all while asking what it means to innovate ethically responsibly, so we see the benefits of our inventiveness without ending up in a God-awful mess!

So if you fancy a crash course in responsible and ethical innovation, all while having a blast watching a bunch of kick-ass movies, read-on:

CHAPTER 1 – IN THE BEGINNING

What’s it about: The first chapter in book sets the scene for what’s to come, as it makes the case for watching movies while wrapping your head around emerging technologies. There’s no specific movie that goes with the chapter, so you may want to skip the movie-watching bit here and go straight to chapter 2. But if you’re hankering for something to watch, 2001 A Space Odyssey is as good a place as anywhere to begin (and is where the chapter starts).

Where to watch: iTunes, Amazon Prime, YouTube and Google.

What’s it about: A wealthy entrepreneur is obsessed with creating the best theme park ever by using genetic engineering to bring back dinosaurs, until the exhibits start eating the customers …

What to watch for: Despite it’s age, Jurassic Park is a well-crafted action movie that touches on themes that are more relevant than ever today, including genetic engineering, de-extinction, complexity theory, and the follies of short-sighted entrepreneurial ambition. Watch the movie for the cautions against developing powerful technologies without a thought to the consequences, and the celebration of the awesomeness of nature — even when it’s less than natural!

Where to watch it: iTunes, Amazon, YouTube and Google

What’s it about: Three young friends grapple with the reality that they were cloned so their organs could be harvested to keep others alive, in a society that sees them as less-than-human.

What to watch for: Never Let Me Go conjures up an alternative past where human cloning has been developed to benefit people at the expense of the clones they get their replacement body parts from. Watch the movie for a searing indictment of how technologies developed for the “greater good” can smash the lives of individuals that get in their way, and how good intentions too-easily slip into turning a blind eye to unethical behavior.

Where to watch it: iTunes, Amazon, YouTube and Google

What’s it about: Genetically altered “precogs”predict murders before they occur, allowing law enforcers to incarcerate would-be murderers before they commit a crime; but the system isn’t as infallible as people think …

What to watch for: Many of the display technologies in Minority Report have inspired new innovations, although the genetically engineered precogs in the film are pure science fantasy. Watch the movie for the way it poses tough questions about predicting and acting on criminal intent, as real-world technologies increasingly claim to be able to do the same using AI, big data, and other means.

Where to watch it: iTunes, Amazon, YouTube and Google

What’s it about: A failing writer gets access to a new drug that supercharges his brain, and transforms him from a loser to a winner. But it’s not without its downsides…

What to watch for: As interest grows around the use “smart drugs” that allegedly enhance cognitive ability (and by inference, the chances of success), Limitless provides an intriguing perspective on their use and abuse. Watch it for the way it explores the often-complex issues around the personal and social consequences of using designer substances to increase mental abilities.

Where to watch it: iTunes, Amazon, YouTube and Google

What’s it about: The uber-rich of the future decamp to a luxuriant space station, while back on Earth the poor struggle to scratch a living while supporting the opulent lifestyles of the wealthy.

What to watch for: Elysium is an intriguing, if sometimes over-earnest, social commentary on the social injustices propagated by widening wealth disparity. Watch the movie for the medical diagnostics/repair technologies that loosely reflect real-world advanced in biomonitoring and 3D tissue printing, the social disparities associated with preferential access to powerful technologies, and the way that AI and robots impact rich and poor communities differently.

Where to watch it: iTunes, Amazon, YouTube and Google

What’s it about: A cyborg in a futuristic “special ops” unit grapples with what it means to be human when her body is not her own, and false memories and identities are being implanted in technology-augmented brains.

What to watch for: Ghost in the Shell is a deeply thoughtful exploration of what it means to be human in a future where body parts can readily be replaced by machines, and where brain-machine interfaces erode the boundaries between who you think you are, and who you may be. Watch it for the meditative sequences on what it is to be human in an augmented future, and what it means to have value in a post-human world.

Where to watch it: iTunes and Google

What’s it about: A brilliant but self-centered and manipulative entrepreneur creates an artificial intelligence that learns about human behaviors and biases from studying Google-like searches, and is surprised when his creation turns against him.

What to watch for: What would happen if we create AIs that know enough about human biases and heuristics to manipulate our behavior to their ends? Ex Machina provides an intriguing glance into a plausible future where AIs learn to press our metaphorical buttons, without being constrained by the cognitive biases and values that limit human behavior. Watch the movie for its exploration of disturbing questions around how AIs might learn to use our biases against us.

Where to watch it: iTunes, Amazon, YouTube, Google and Netflix

What’s it about: A brilliant AI scientist’s mind is fused with a supercomputer, and the resulting superintelligence makes massive strides in nanotechnology, while threatening human life as we know it.

What to watch for: Although Transcendence plays fast and lose with technological reality, it raises enough questions around technological convergence, techno-terrorism, and the line between “could” and “should”, to make it interesting. Watch it for the impossible yet entertaining emergence of technologies that bring about the Singularity, and how promises of extreme technological power leads to extreme actions to oppose it.

Where to watch it: iTunes, Amazon, YouTube, Google and Netflix

What’s it about: A smart but socially naive scientist invents a super-strong stain-resistant fabric, and can’t understand why everyone in the industry turns against him.

What to watch for: Although it was made over half a century ago, The man in the White Suit provides a surprisingly accurate portrayal of what it’s like to be an obsessively curious scientist, and how easy it is to get so caught up in the process that you fail yo see the broader social landscape around new inventions. Watch the movie for parallels with modern-day nanotechnology, and how the social dynamic between the invention and the people it potentially impacts in the film is remarkably prescient of modern-day tensions.

Where to watch it: iTunes, Amazon, YouTube and Google

What’s it about: A wealthy scientist is so concerned about the predicted consequences of global overpopulation, that he genetically engineers a virus to kill half the world’s people.

What to watch for: Despite the paper-thin plot, Inferno illuminates the dangers of slipping into deeply unethical behavior while trying to address perceived global risks. It also draws on very-real debates around gain of function research (making viruses more virulent in order to study them), and dual use research (inventing technologies that can be used for bad as well as good). Watch the movie for an often-mindless but nevertheless engaging plot that occasionally raises serious questions around the ethical uses of science and technology, especially when they are in the hands of people who flout the norms of conventional behavior.

Where to watch it: iTunes, Amazon, YouTube and Google

What’s it about: Human-driven global warming leads to a sudden and catastrophic shift in the Earth’s climate, endangering lives and transforming the geopolitical landscape.

What to watch for: Despite The Day After Tomorrow having a somewhat confusing and at times deeply implausible message about global warming, the film nevertheless challenges viewers to think about what acting responsibly means in a world where we are right on the edge of bringing about catastrophic and irreversible changes in the Earth’s climate. Watch it for impossible but nevertheless entertaining super-freezing storms, and the underlying reality that what we do to the climate matters, and not always in ways that are easy to predict.

Where to watch it: iTunes, Amazon, YouTube and Google

What’s it about: A researcher perseveres in her search for extraterrestrial life, driven by her hopes, and tempered by her belief in the scientific process.

What to watch for: Contact beautifully captures the passion and thrill of what it’s like to be a scientist and to do science . But it’s also a revealing study of the intertwined relationship between science and belief. Watch the film for the way it gets under the skin of sometimes-misguided ideas about science and belief, and reveals how the discipline of science, when combined with our passions and beliefs, elevates who we are.

Where to watch it: iTunes, Amazon, YouTube and Google

What’s it about: This is the wrap-up chapter, and like chapter 1 it doesn’t come with a specific movie. But it does reference The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.

There’s a back-story here: When I first pitched the book, my working title for it was The Moviegoer’s Guide to the Future, and it had a very Douglas Adams/Hitchhiker’s Guide vibe. The grand plan was that the last chapter would play on this by emphasizing the comforting words on the cover of the fictitious Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy: Don’t Panic!

When the books’ title was changed to Films from the Future, I couldn’t quite let go of this, and so the book still ends on this optimistic note — as it should!

Where to watch it: iTunes, Amazon Prime, YouTube and Google

(NOTE: For the full Hitchhiker’s Guide experience, you really need to go back to the original BBC Radio series (if you can find it!), or the nearly-as-good BBC TV series!)

Available From

And everywhere good books are sold.

Published by Mango Publishing
ISBN: 978-1633539075