1 00:00:13,096 --> 00:00:18,452 Hi. I'm Wheeler Winston Dixon, James Ryan professor of Film Studies at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, 2 00:00:18,452 --> 00:00:20,120 and this is Frame By Frame. 3 00:00:20,120 --> 00:00:27,661 Science fiction films first came about in the beginning of cinema with George Milies' "Trip to the Moon," 4 00:00:27,661 --> 00:00:35,178 but they've come in sporadic waves of interest. I'm thinking, for example of "Things to Come," 5 00:00:35,178 --> 00:00:39,740 the fantastic British film. Also Fritz Lang's "Metropolis" in 1927. 6 00:00:39,740 --> 00:00:45,952 But a vogue for science fiction didn't really hit till the 1950s in America, 7 00:00:45,952 --> 00:00:52,553 with things like "When Worlds Collide," "The Thing," which was one of the first great science fiction films. 8 00:00:52,553 --> 00:00:56,490 "The Day the Earth Stood Still," "Earth vs.the Flying Saucers," 9 00:00:56,490 --> 00:01:00,961 And science fiction reflected a kind of Cold War paranoia. 10 00:01:00,961 --> 00:01:05,766 The other thing about science fiction is that it's tied curiously to the Western. 11 00:01:05,766 --> 00:01:11,772 As the westerns sort of became moribund, and now people don't make too many westerns these days, 12 00:01:11,772 --> 00:01:17,346 science fiction became "the final frontier." As manifest destiny was more or less explored, 13 00:01:17,346 --> 00:01:21,348 now space became the new frontier that had to be explored. 14 00:01:21,348 --> 00:01:28,755 And this, of course, lead to the success of the "Star Trek" series and "Star Wars." 15 00:01:28,755 --> 00:01:32,459 And of course, the dystopian science fiction films like "Alien." 16 00:01:32,459 --> 00:01:39,266 Now, here that we are in the 21st century, science fiction has become an absolute generic staple. 17 00:01:39,266 --> 00:01:41,969 Science fiction films are more popular than ever. 18 00:01:41,969 --> 00:01:46,115 I think they offer a sense of escape. They offer a sense of wonder. 19 00:01:46,115 --> 00:01:50,877 They offer a sense of exploring something beyond what we know. 20 00:01:50,877 --> 00:01:56,650 The world has become very small now. We're in touch with everyone around the world, whether we like to or not. 21 00:01:56,650 --> 00:02:02,346 And science fiction offers us a sense that there's frontier out there that we don't know... 22 00:02:02,346 --> 00:02:04,625 There's civilizations out there that we don't know, 23 00:02:04,625 --> 00:02:07,260 and science fiction offers us a way to escape, 24 00:02:07,260 --> 00:02:11,164 but also it's a commentary on the smallness of our world right now, 25 00:02:11,164 --> 00:02:15,372 and also it projects into the future the possibilities of what can happen, 26 00:02:15,372 --> 00:02:22,109 in terms of both good, or in terms of bad... basically a dystopian future like "Blade Runner," 27 00:02:22,109 --> 00:02:24,242 in which the future does not work. 28 00:02:24,242 --> 00:02:28,849 So science fiction projects our fear and our hopes on the cinema screen.