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Solaris
Video: 20th Century Fox 24283S. 94 minutes. Price:
£10.99 (UK). Stars: George Clooney, Natascha McElhone, Jeremy Davies,
Viola Davis and Ulrich Tukur.
Over
the years, I’ve seen the Russian film and read the book. With
the former, it must have been youth and the difference in body
language that tended to make me wonder what was going on. Russian
actors looking blandly into the camera as if it meant something
was kinda lost on me.
The book was much better and this isn’t a bad film adaptation.
If anything, ‘Solaris’ should really be regarded as a true SF
film in the 2001 mode. No funny aliens speaking perfect English
with similar cultures. No cowboy SF with pop guns. If this film
was released 20 years ago it would be considered more an arts
than an SF film.

An investigation team on a space station around
the planet Solaris seems to have gone AWOL and the last message
received was for Earth psychologist Chris Kelvin to be sent. This
causes Earth Government to arrange for him to be sent with a reminder
that a military unit will move in unless he gives the all-clear.
What he finds is the sudden materialisation of loved
ones who don’t really know why they are there. In Kelvin’s case,
it is the resurrection of his dead wife who had previously committed
suicide.
Bringing together the puzzle of Solaris which is
really a first contact situation is done with some extreme subtle
direction. Even with a more American POV compared to the earlier
Russian film, I doubt this is for the average non-SF film goer
and likely to become a cult favourite amongst the SF purists with
a remarkable performance from all the actors involved.
The special effects are more background than down
your down the throat look at that. As an adaptation, director
Steven Soderbergh should be commended for staying with the spirit
of Stanislaw Lems’s original book and this film should be used
as a reminder to other directors who tend to use SF books as a
jumping off point than staying true to the source. I wish more
SF films were like this.
GF Willmetts
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OTHER REVIEWS - September 2003
Book Reviews
The Witches Of Chiswick by Robert Rankin
Saturn by Ben Bova
Misspent Youth by Peter F. Hamilton
White Crow by Mary Gentle
Mistress Of Dragons by Margaret Weis
The Sorensen 4 Incident by Gary Crookes
The New Discworld Companion by Terry Pratchett
The Return Of Santiago by Mike Resnick
Solar Lottery by Philip K. Dick
Terminator 3: Rise Of The Machines by David Hagberg
Transitions: The Art Of Todd Lockwood with text
by Karen Haber and Todd Lockwood
Illumina: The Art Of J.P. Targete with text by
Patricia Briggs
Wasteland Of Flint by Thomas Harlan
The Court Of The Midnight King by Freda Warrington
Heretics Of Dune by Frank Herbert
Chapter House: Dune by Frank Herbert
Spiral by Andy Remic
Spaceland by Rudy Rucker
Alien Psychology by Roderick MacDonald
Minion: The Vampire Huntress Legend by L.A. Banks
Tetrarch (The Well Of Echoes Volume 2) by Ian
Irvine
Great Fantasy Art Themes From The Frank Collection
by Jane and Howard Frank
The Blue World by Jack Vance
Lords Of Rainbow by Vera Nazarian
Fuzzy Dice by Paul Di Filippo
Evening’s Empire by David Herter
A Forest Of Stars by Kevin J Anderson
LUST - Four Letters. Infinite Possibilities by
Geoff Ryman
Down And Out In The Magic Kingdom by Cory Doctorow
The Iron Grail by Robert Holdstock
Engine City by Ken MacLeod
Evolution by Stephen Baxter
Games & Videos
Tomb Raider The Angel of Darkness
Solaris
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