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Science Fiction Master Harlan Ellison
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Ellison shifts back to a more enthusiastically positive tone when it comes to “The Discarded,” which was adapted from Ellison’s 1959 short story No Room in Space.
“I am not fool enough to tell you the many things I don’t like about it—I would rather help them sell the thing,” Ellison laughed about the futuristic tale, which concerns a group of mutants who are forced to live in spaceship after they’ve been forced to leave the planet. “We used everything in the short story, while Josh added a really wonderful love scene. And I was able to add a little anti-right wing nut-freak stuff.”
“It was all done with a good heart and high intelligence,” said Ellision of the series, which also featured adaptations of stories by such noted sci-fi scribes as Robert Heinlein, Robert Sheckley and John Kessel. “It’s gonna be a rare icon, this show. Somewhere down the line, these [six installments] will be like the lost episodes of The Honeymooners or I Love Lucy.”
Posted by Laurence Lerman on July 9, 2008 | Comments (4)
Way to go Harlan! guess you won;t be working for ABC soon--good for you. and nice work Mr. Lerman for getting Harlan at his nastiest!
Good to know that in these changing times and all the PC and Corporate-speak bull**** that we can still count on one man to tell it like it is. Thank you Harlan, for never giving up the "good fight" and calling a human piece of phlegm a human piece of phlegm.
This is all very nice, Harlan, but the episodes were not very good. None of them even approached the level of writing of a Babylon 5 or a Battlestar Galactica. Not even as good as most old Outer Limiits episodes. You can blame ABC for not giving it a good time spot, but if I was handed this mediocre series, I probably would have burned off the episodes on Friday nights too and not show two of the six episodes. The episodes started off weak and got progressively weaker. Harlan must be getting some royalties from the DVD which is why he's saying something nice. In five years, he'll probably be telling people what a piece of crap this series was.
Does that man do anything other than complain these days? I realise it's difficult to reconcile that your best years were four decades ago, but please, let's have a little more positivity!