I may not
have made millions over the course of my life, may not have moved the culture
with my writing, may not have influenced a generation of musicians with my
music. But one thing I have done is gained an in-depth appreciation and
understanding of science fiction, going way, way, all the way back to my single
digits. That boy who spent second grade sick in bed devouring black-and-white
1950s sci fi, who eagerly tore into that Asimov five-pack of paperbacks Santa
left under the tree (and dozens and dozens of other authors afterwards), who wrote his first
science fiction story on a twenty-five pound metal typewriter he could barely
lift, now sadly laments the state of science fiction.
More concisely,
corporate science fiction, as in, but not exclusive to, Disney.
If you
want to know where Hopper stands, consider the following:
Star
Wars ended in
1983.
Star
Trek ended in
1994.
The Alien
franchise ended in 1992.
The Terminator
movies ended in 1991.
Superhero
movies, of which there really were only two, ended in 1980.
The Indiana
Jones movies wrapped up nicely in 1989.
There was
only one Matrix movie, released in 1999.
Likewise,
there was only one Jurassic Park movie, in 1993.
Every franchise
movie released after these dates is either bad or gross or both. Wokeness, DEI,
and greed, ruins all.
Hopper
hath spoken.
Sidenote:
Wasn’t the 90s a great time to be a moviegoer?
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