Edward Willett

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It’s 2001! Where’s our space odyssey?

Ever since 2001: A Space Odyssey appeared in 1968, 2001 has been one of those years, like 1984, that somehow represented "the future." Well, guess what? 1984 came and went, and now 2001 has arrived--and with it, a spate of news stories comparing the "predictions" in the film with the reality. I think that's a pretty wrong-headed approach, considering the main focus of the story created by writer Arthur C. Clarke and filmmaker Stanley Kubrick isn't on the evolution of technology but the evolution of humanity--which, in the movie, is influenced by mysterious black monoliths left behind by some unknown alien culture. Nevertheless, because the film was set in an identifiable year and made an ...

Posted by Edward Willett at 11:40, January 9th, 2001 under Blog, Columns, Science Columns | Comment now »

Mummies

Half a century after Boris Karloff first played the man in the bandages, The Mummy is once again drawing people in droves to movie theatres. It's almost like The Mummy has eternal life--which, of course, is the whole idea. A mummy is any dead animal or human body in which soft tissues have been preserved long after they would ordinarily decay. Normally, bacteria decompose dead bodies. To create a mummy, you have to deprive the bacteria of at warmth, oxygen or moisture--the three things they need to grow. Mummies occur naturally whenever one of these is absent. Mummies have been found perfectly preserved by cold in the Arctic, by a lack of oxygen in peat bogs, ...

Posted by Edward Willett at 6:14, May 18th, 1999 under Blog, Columns, Science Columns | Comment now »

Special effects

  Motion pictures have always been largely illusion: artificial realities convincingly created by assorted designers, craftspeople, cinematographers and actors. But these days, what you see on screen is less "real" than ever. Today special effects rule the movies, thanks primarily to computers. That's not to say there were no special effects before computers came along. In fact, special effects are as old as the movies themselves. A French magician-turned-filmmaker, George Melies, invented special effects in A Trip to the Moon, filmed in 1902, in which he shot a spaceship from a cannon into the eye of the Man in the Moon. In other short films he cut people in two and changed humans into beasts. Three techniques he pioneered formed the basis ...

Posted by Edward Willett at 17:53, July 24th, 1995 under Blog, Columns, Science Columns | Comment now »

Laughter

At a dinner party I recently attended, the hosts commented on having seen the movie Four Weddings and a Funeral during their vacation cruise. Several of us immediately began waxing eloquent about the film's delightful humor. Whereupon our hosts concluded their assessment, which we had interrupted in our enthusiasm: they'd been bored stiff. A sense of humor is something that is both common to all of us and unique to each of us. (Usually when we say someone "doesn't have a sense of humor," what we really mean is that they don't share our sense of humor. I've been accused of being humorless myself by people who considered disabling my car by pulling off the ...

Posted by Edward Willett at 11:16, August 8th, 1994 under Blog, Columns, Science Columns | Comment now »

IMAX

The space shuttle towers above you, gleaming white in the early morning sunshine. The familiar calm voice of the NASA announcer counts down the final seconds to launch. Billowing white steam and smoke explode around you, and as the shuttle majestically rises on a brilliant pillar of flame the thunder of the rockets shakes... the theatre. Theatre? You may feel like you're pad-side at Cape Canaveral, but "it ain't necessarily so." You're just viewing an IMAX film-- and this spring you can view it in Regina at the Saskatchewan Science Centre's Kramer IMAX Theatre. IMAX films are, in a word, big. In four words, they're really, really, ...

Posted by Edward Willett at 18:54, April 17th, 1991 under Blog, Columns, Science Columns | Comment now »