[QUOTE=BrainGlutton]
Buckaroo Banzai vs. The World Crime League!
[/QUOTE]
Oh, yeah, baby, bring it on! That’d be great… but Buckaroo’s posse is probably a little too long in the tooth now, 20+ years later. Probably need a whole new cast.
Clarke’s Childhood’s End could be a beautiful, moving, powerful flick. There were rumors a few years ago that Hilary Swank was attached to a script for it, but nothing ever came of it.
George R.R. Martin’s Tuf Voyaging (a favorite of mine, with a great antihero and a funny but powerful pro-environment/anti-war message) and Dying of the Light (could be a very elegiac different-cultures movie) would both be great on the big screen. I’d pay big money to see either.
Heinlein’s The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress, as noted above. That’d be outstanding, and long overdue. Also Glory Road, which with just a few tweaks of the book would be a rollicking good adventure. If they’re gonna redo Starship Troopers, they’ve got to have powered armor. Just got to. (I’ve always thought that it could be done really well in Pixar-style CGI, like The Incredibles).
Ursula K. LeGuin’s The Left Hand of Darkness would be another great first-contact story. It could pretty much be filmed on a shoestring, too.
I liked Will Smith’s I Robot, although it bore only the barest resemblance to Asimov’s original. I’ve read Harlan Ellison’s screenplay and, if the studio was true to it, it would rawk.
And either Diane Duane’s Dark Mirror, a ST:TNG novel set mostly in the Mirror Universe (with a dolphin navigator, Klingon opera and backstabbing crew plots), or Peter David’s Imzadi (one of the best, most moving and clever ST time-travel plots ever), would be waaaaaaaaaaaay better than the recent run of ST movies.