Jones, Raymond F: This Island Earth

ray gower

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 5, 2001
Messages
3,315
This Island Earth

The publisher, Pulpless.Com, Inc. (webmaster@pulpless.com) , writes:-

In 1949 and 1950 a science fiction serial by Raymond F.Jones appeared in Thrilling Wonder Stories. Within half a decade that serial would make history as the basis of the first science fiction movie about interstellar travel and interstellar war. The next Hollywood movie to venture to another solar system was Forbidden Planet, a wholly original construct of the prestige studio MGM. But solid, reliable Universal Studios was there first...long before Star Trek.
This Island Earth was really the first Star Wars. Colorful, spectacular, wildly imaginative, it lived up to everything its agent could possibly want, a man who was known as Mr. Science Fiction and who now brings back this classic novel: Forrest J Ackerman. A phrase he coined in another galaxy a long time ago says it all: Gosh Wow!

This story has it all.

The cover of this special edition features Jeff Morrow in the role of one of the most sympathetic aliens in 1950's science fiction film (the other is Michael Rennie in The Day the Earth Stood Still, also adapted from a literary source). In the novel he is Jorgasnovara, in the movie the less jaw-breaking Exeter. In both print and celluloid he comes to respect the Earth scientists essayed by Rex Reason and Faith Domergue.

This Island Earth is a book of heroes. The first half of the film closely follows the novel but then diverges from the intellectual challenges faced by Dr. Cal Meachem to more cinematic fare. Reading the novel now, one cannnot help but marvel at how Jones' views on everything from labor disputes to the predictability of computers influenced later movies and television, making This Island Earth, the novel, even more influential than one would guess from This Island Earth, the movie. Its influence even extends to the main plot device in Carl Sagan's novel Contact and the movie made from it by Robert Zemeckis starring Jodie Foster. The mysterious instructions for building the "machine" in Contact is an obvious riff on the mysterious instructions for building an interocitor in both the novel and movie This Island Earth!
 
I've never actually read the book.
But I do remember the film, which I believe follows the book really well.
One of the first technicolor Sci Fi movies and at the time it must have pushed the technology hard. It was also hugely complex, having features that can be recognised as the central them in almost every Sci/Fi movie since.
 
The film does do a decent job of adapting the book, but nonetheless I'd recommend reading the book. It's by no means an exemplar of the genre, but it's a simply-written, taut tale that, when you're finished, will leave you surprised at its depth.
There are better books, but for a quick read that'll surprise you, pick this one up.
 
I never read the book but I saw the film in a way. I saw the Mystery Science 3000 rendition of this island earth. It was hilarious but im guessing the movie itself was quite good.

Krakatau
 
Never knew there was an MST version of this!
I suspect they must have pulled it into all sorts of knots to get the gags, The film is certainly a gag free thriller
 
The film adaptation got Mystery Science 3000 treatment.:)
 

Similar threads


Back
Top