the cold equations
Jun. 25th, 2004 12:11 amI had previously been under the impression that one of the pivotal characters was a child (of perhaps nine or ten), not an eighteen-year-old. I found that this affected my enjoyment of the story; the character makes a mistake with consequences (not following directions, in a really big way), and when I thought those mistakes were being made by a child I had more sympathy. As it is, it's hard for me to really appreciate this character's angst. The story is also somewhat a product of its time (the 50s); the other main character makes a point of saying he would have handled things differently if it had been a "man". (Aside: she's a "girl".) It's still a good story, but I liked it better with my mistaken impressions. :-)
There was a Twilight Zone episode based on the story (the series from about a decade ago, which I mostly missed due to not having the right cable channels available). I'd kind of like to see that.
(no subject)
Date: 2004-06-25 01:45 pm (UTC)I agree (and had not previously noticed either). At several times I wanted to whap the character with a clue-by-four and shout "stop sniveling as if he can wave a wand and make it better!", but in the end I was still sad for her.
"Yeah, he was a total bastard and an utter fool, but he doesn't deserve this. This is too much. No one deserves this."
I've had similar thoughts during recent B5 viewings. :-) (Londo, of course.) I agree; this kind of storytelling has the potential to work really, really well. (It's also easy to screw up, of course.)