Thanks for that quote Larry Mudd I have just ordered a selection of short stories from Amazon to read more of “The Machine Stops”.
The two pages visable of “The Third Eye” makes the law suit sound scurrilous
Thanks for that quote Larry Mudd I have just ordered a selection of short stories from Amazon to read more of “The Machine Stops”.
The two pages visable of “The Third Eye” makes the law suit sound scurrilous
That’s nothing! Even as a young child I’ve had bouts of “existence panic” where I suddenly think: “Say, why do I have self-awareness anyway? What if reality was just some sort of massive illusion?”
The Siblings must have read my mind and stolen my brainwaves! :eek:
:wally
Holy shit-that’s a hell of a lot of suck.
From http://www.daghettotymz.com/matrix/sophiaupdate.html:
I saw the film opening day and went on to see it three or four more times in the theaters. Never once did I see any of these scenes. This girl’s off her rocker.
Sophia’z definitely got zome zcrewz looze.
Some of you seem to be arguing that there was *no need * to plagerize her story, for most of the ideas are common to sci-fi and have been for many years. and you would seem to be right. But that is not the point.
It doesn’t matter if they needed to use the work or not. It only matters if they did use the work or not.
This may be bullshit in a college paper. But if she can actually any of the above, she’s got a big payday coming.
The Matrix aired on March 31, 1999? Damn, shouldn’t have spent my money in the theater. (then again, it was probably in fullscreen and heavily edited)
Hwa? Does that mean she expects people to own 35mm film, or that there were actually DVDs that had those supposed scenes? Seems odd that a DVD released six months later would have the scenes on it, when the 35mm version must have disappeared so fast that nobody has ever seen it.
Then again, since it isn’t her talking directly, maybe the person talking got some facts wrong?
Oh, and I should have added some extraneous "z"s in that post, but I didn’t really see a good place for them.
The point was that because these ideas are so commonplace, they wouldn’t have needed to steal them all from one source. It makes the theft seem less likely, as do the nonsensical claims.
I’m inclined to think it is bullshit, and made up out of whole cloth. (Maybe not maliciously – maybe she really believes that the FBI investigated and determined that her scribblings were consulted during the process.) It’s interesting that, if she has these provocative documents referred to in the article, she hasn’t included them in her rivetting compendium of “authentic court dociments,” (PDF) which consists of some incoherent racist ranting, a press release, an e-mail from Fox saying she has no case against them because they’re only a distributor for foreign markets, a copyright registry notice, a list of characters that bear no resemblance at all to any characters in The Matrix, photostats of the e-mails and message-board postings quoted above, and a bill from an attorney for attempting to serve the W. bros with a summons. Wow! All those “authentic court documents” and she accidentally left out anything that indicates any connection between her story and The Matrix, apart from blind assertions that she “wrote” the Matrix, with absolutely no supporting evidence.
Add to this the sheer lunacy that comes out of her mouth. Here’s a 30MB wav file of a “radio” interview.. Representative tidbits:
In short, she’s totally delusional. If a student reporter took her word that the FBI said such and such, they’re taking the word of someone who says an awful lot of crazy shit without having (or feeling the need for) any kind of support.
Yeah, I believe there are FBI documents that say the W. Bros consulted her story all throughout the process of creating The Matrix. They’re right next to the original release of The Matrix that opens up with a Star Wars text scroll. The one that was intended to counter George Lucas’ Satanic point of view, and has been covered up by the “Massa Media.” The one that they cut the “Just like Star Wars” scroll out of, to avoid having to pay Sophia Stewart royalties.
Bwahahahaha. And the Archangel Gabriel flies out of my butt.
S.F. novelist Jack Chalker feels that there was a rip-off too. And with at least somewhat more cause (ie-more than the screwball described in the OP has which is none at all).
In his “Wonderland Gambit” series, there’s people trapped in a VR world who don’t know they’re trapped in a VR world, lots of “Alice in Wonderland” references, etc.–the opening bits of both are very similar–our computer engineer hero is warned by a mysterious female that he’s in great danger and that everything he knows is false.
However, the plots completely diverge beyond that (IE: Chalker doesn’t have the brain-damaged “Humans as Duracells” plot point. Also Chalker has layer upon layer of VR worlds–you’re never quite sure what’s real until the very end.) but some of the themes and motifs 9and the opening) are very similar.
Here’s whatChalker has to say (note: I don’t agree with him–having some elements in common != ripping off)
Fenris
Come on Fenris, you’re missing the most obvious link here. Chalker has written two novels with dominant transgender themes (Downtiming the Night Side and The Identity Matrix). Clearly the man’s work has had some profound influence on the Wachowskis.
But then, by her logic, isn’t she admitting to plagarizing Star Wars?
Damn. She makes L. Ron Hubbard look sane and rational.
The funny thing is even if she intended to plagiarize Star Wars, she didn’t, because she’s so nucking futs that she thinks Lucas’ story is cryptically about all the cloud-cuckoo-land stuff that she’s obsessed with- namely a Zionist conspiracy to force people to submit to the Mark of the Beast by accepting a Social Security number. She thinks that her story is connected to Star Wars through a commonality that exists only in her confused imagination.
She has that special sight that psychopaths have of “seeing” how everything relates to her delusional beliefs, while having no ability to see what she’s actually looking at. This is how she is able to explain that she named her story after a Buddhist concept, because it’s all about Egyptian mythology, well in name, anyway, except she demonstrates that she doesn’t have any idea about what the Eye of Horus represents, and anyway, she really called it The Third Eye so that we’d know she was talking about the Apocalypse of John. Never mind that by no amount of tortured logic can you connect the idea of “The Third Eye” with Revelations, children.
She’s able to make these connections between totally unrelated concepts because she’s evolved way beyond referring to silly old books, she gets it all straight from the “universal source” – her ass.
Two?
Heh…I’d have to think hard to find four that didn’t have transgender themes–Well World had characters turned into big-boobed mindless nymphos at one point, the whole point of the Soul Riders stuff was sexual roles and gender identity (vis-a-vis people getting turned into mindless, big-boobed nymphos), the Dancing Gods stuff had people getting turned into mindless, big-boobed nymphos…lessee…I think the Rings of the Master stuff had at least one person who got transformed into a mindless, big boobed nympho. Um…lessee–one of the characters in the Lords of the Diamond stuff got turned into a woman, and I think another got turned into a mindless, big-boobed nympho.
I don’t think anyone in And The Devil Will Drag You Under did, and there was that one non SF novel he did, plus he did a booklet that was an autobiography of Scrooge McDuck–that didn’t have any transformations into mindless big-boobed nymphos. But if you asked me to find a fourth, I’d be stumped.
Well, it’s pretty obvious that she’s crazier than a shithouse rat, no doubt. (Although this is comedy GOLD. Am I the only one who finds these kinds of things hilarious?).
However, in her tortured logic, shouldn’t she at least see that if the Matrix is enough of a rip-off of her work that she can sue, then you’d think she’d at least say that Lucas should then sue her.
But then, I guess that’s why they call 'em crazy.
[QUOTE=Fenris]
Two?
Heh…I’d have to think hard to find four that didn’t have transgender themes–Well World had characters turned into big-boobed mindless nymphos at one point, the whole point of the Soul Riders stuff was sexual roles and gender identity (vis-a-vis people getting turned into mindless, big-boobed nymphos), the Dancing Gods stuff had people getting turned into mindless, big-boobed nymphos…lessee…I think the Rings of the Master stuff had at least one person who got transformed into a mindless, big boobed nympho. Um…lessee–one of the characters in the Lords of the Diamond stuff got turned into a woman, and I think another got turned into a mindless, big-boobed nympho. /QUOTE]
And to think I misspent my adolescence pawing through the Gor books for the hot stuff.
Rats, sorry about screwing up the coding on that post, quoting Fenris. Off to write “preview is my friend” 100 times.
She sounds like a theosphosist, but Madam Blatvatsky was actually rather creative.
I don’t know why everyone acuses Chalker of an obsession with transgenderism. I mean, there’s none of that at all in fully two of the Four Lords of the Diamond books. (Unless I’m forgetting something from Charon, which I might be.)
–Cliffy
P.S. This isn’t to suggest I’m not a big Chalker fan, BTW, 'cuz I am.
That dude is going to make one ugly chick.