All posts by A Futurist at the Movies

A Futurist at the Movies is written by Josh Calder, a futurist living in Washington, DC. For more about Josh, see "Who am I?" or contact him here.

Robots in every (Korean) home

The NYT reports on South Korean dreams of ubiquitous robots. “If all goes according to plan, robots will be in every South Korean household between 2015 and 2020.”

Korea is uniquely serious about robots, and has a track record of bringing ambitious technological plans to fruition. It vies with Japan as the most plausible place that the science fiction vision of helpful robots might be achieved.

Koreans may have a more practical plan than the android-obsessed Japanese:

While other countries have focused on developing military, industrial or humanoid robots, …. South Korea decided three years ago to develop service robots that, instead of operating independently, derive their intelligence from being part of a network.

Review: “V for Vendetta”

FORECAST SUMMARY

Event / Likelihood
Totalitarism in Britain by 2020 — very low, even decades after that date
Severe bioterror attack — medium

RATINGS
Overall rating: 5.5 (40th of 119 movies)

Futurism rating: 4
This movie is more about the politics of the present than a vision of the future. It does not attempt a meaningful depiction of how societies actually creep toward tyranny.

Entertainment rating: 7
For a movie about terrorism and oppression, this movie ducks every hard question. “Violence can be used for good,” a character states, but that idea is accepted in some form by every society. The regime depicted is sufficiently odious that resisting it is clearly moral.

Despite its imperfections, the movie is interesting as an unfolding series of mysteries, and occasionally as visual spectacle.

Plausibility rating: 7
Unlikely, but there are no inherent or absolute reasons it could not occur.

(A sidenote: we know where the crowd got its masks, but it was impressive that they managed to assemble the entire Zorro ensemble.)

Approach to the future
Vehicle for views on current events

TOPICS DEPICTED

Tyranny

By 2020, England has fallen under control of a vicious fundamentalist Christian regime, brought to power in a climate of fear created by war and plague.

It happened very rapidly: in 2015 things seem to have been normal, and by 2018 the government was rounding up lesbians and banning Islam and many kinds of art.

The trigger was a bioterror attack that killed 80,000 people, amidst a chaotic and dangerous world situation. (The US has apparently dissolved into civil war.)

Such a calamity would trigger drastic responses, but they would flow from the nature of the society afflicted. A stable Western European nation is unlikely to fall so far, so fast.

Above all, England does not have a reservoir of extremists from which to draw, particularly in the religious sphere. A fundamentalist regime is far more plausible in the US, where the “Christian right” has heavily politicized itself. Even here, only a minority of that group has truly authoritarian tendencies.

A much better depiction of tyranny in England is the Richard III set in an alternate 1930s, when that country had some actual fascists. Christian extremism is more the forte of the US, and is well-depicted in the futurist film The Handmaid’s Tale.

Bioterror
Thousands are killed by an engineered bioterror agent.

This is all too plausible. Biotech capabilities are steadily growing, and the possibility of garage bioterror looms, potentially enabling a situation like that in Twelve Monkeys.

“If I Only Had a Blog”

Colleague Kevin Osborn wrote an impromptu song for the would-be futurist blogger this morning:

If I Only Had a Blog

I could broadcast my opinion
And not be just a minion
Another worthless cog,
I would not waste an hour,
I’d become a virtual power
If I only had a blog.

I would write on future topics,
Foresightful not myopic,
The world would be agog:
Write on gamers, write on genomes,
Write on China, write on new homes,
If I only had a blog.

Oh I could tell you why
The nanos will soon rule;
I could write of things that make me seem a fool,
But I’d stand firm, just like a mule.

I would be a future shamus,
And someday I’d be famous,
A prince and not a frog,
Be succinct and be frugal
I could be a hit on Google
If I only had a blog.

Nuclear research: a telling argument

The Onion argues that a rapid, irresponsible expansion of nuclear power is essential:

Without swift, even reckless expansion of our domestic nuclear-energy program, scientists will never be exposed to the new and unique radiation poisonings from which the most powerful superheroes are generated.

We must, they conclude, give priority to “scientific research and its resulting freak accidents.”  Indeed.