SF cinema and TV
In contrast to earlier decades, traditional science fiction of the late 1960s and early ’70s reached unprecedented popularity on television and in film. American SF television series, such as Star Trek (1966–69; founded by Gene Roddenberry), may have primed film producers and audiences alike for cinema adaptations of “serious” science fiction. Fahrenheit 451 (1966), 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), and Charly (1968)—based on works by Bradbury, Clarke, and Daniel Keyes, respectively—earned critical praise and attracted a growing number of directors and actors to the genre. If any doubt remained about the commercial viability of SF cinema, the blockbuster movies Star Wars (1977), Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977), and E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial (1982) proved that science fiction had finally moved beyond its drive-in B-film status. In fact, U.S. box-office receipts for science fiction, fantasy, and horror films jumped from 5 percent in 1971 to nearly 50 percent by 1982; although the share fell somewhat in subsequent years, science fiction continued to be one of the most important Hollywood movie formats.
Ridley Scott’s film Blade Runner (1982), based on Philip K. Dick’s Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? (1968), prefigured the 1980s phenomenon known as cyberpunk. It combined a fascination for cybernetics (the science of communication and control theory, especially with regard to the human nervous system and brain) with a “punk,” or alienated, social consciousness, thus melding elements of soft and hard science fiction. William Gibson in Neuromancer (1984) coined the word cyberspace to describe a computer-mediated virtual world into which humans plugged their brains. Other works of this subgenre include John Shirley’s City Come A-Walkin’ (1980), Bruce Sterling’s Schismatrix (1985), and Lewis Shiner’s Deserted Cities of the Heart (1988). The explosive growth of the computer industry in the 1990s and the new forums for expressing alienation presented by the Internet gave cyberpunk writing a bracing sense of immediate relevancy.
The spectacular nature of science fiction’s thematics played very strongly to Hollywood’s technical advantages over rival cinemas in Europe, Japan, Hong Kong, and Mumbai (then Bombay). After the 1970s, the American SF film with its state-of-the-art special effects became science fiction’s public face. Science fiction films such as the Terminator series (1984, 1991, 2003, 2009, 2015), the Alien series (1979, 1986, 1992, 1997), and the Jurassic Park series (1993, 1997, 2001, 2015) became major money earners worldwide.
Heroic fantasy, which had remained a minority taste in Britain and elsewhere for many decades, captivated a new generation and emerged in the 1990s as a dominant subgenre known to devotees as “sword and sorcery.” One indication of the changing commercial reality was the 1992 reorganization of SF’s largest professional association, the Science Fiction Writers of America, into the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America, Inc. Undreamed-of book sales of such fantasy works as J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone (1997; U.S. title Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone) and succeeding volumes brought wildly successful film adaptations of the Harry Potter books (2001–11) as well as of J.R.R. Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings (2001–03).