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Movies Sci-Fi

Ender's Game Trailer Released 470

The first trailer has been released for the movie adaptation of Orson Scott Card's sci-fi classic Ender's Game. It gives us a good look at Harrison Ford as Colonel Graff, Ben Kingsley as Mazer Rackham, and Hugo's Asa Butterfield as Ender. It also demonstrates just how much money they put into the special effects for this movie.

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Ender's Game Trailer Released

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  • Trailer Link (Score:1, Informative)

    by __aawavt7683 ( 72055 ) on Tuesday May 07, 2013 @05:03PM (#43658377) Journal
  • Comment removed (Score:2, Informative)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday May 07, 2013 @05:46PM (#43658867)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Re:F22s (Score:4, Informative)

    by HPHatecraft ( 2748003 ) on Tuesday May 07, 2013 @05:52PM (#43658937)

    Mazer Rackham is Maori -- the facial tattoo is typically applied to the face if you are a male.

  • Re:Climax (Score:5, Informative)

    by gmhowell ( 26755 ) <gmhowell@gmail.com> on Tuesday May 07, 2013 @07:46PM (#43660005) Homepage Journal

    Hell they are flat out telling him what they are doing. When did they ever admit to their goals in the novel?

    Quite. What a miserable mess. They rewrote it basically from scratch. Kept the names and the We Win part and redid everything else.

    You can tell all of this from the trailer? Or you're just choosing to interpret things this way to give you an excuse to vent your nerd rage?

  • Re:F22s (Score:4, Informative)

    by pjabardo ( 977600 ) on Tuesday May 07, 2013 @10:20PM (#43661183)
    If I remember correctly, in one of the invasions, the aliens landed in China.
  • Re:Climax (Score:5, Informative)

    by margeman2k3 ( 1933034 ) on Tuesday May 07, 2013 @11:06PM (#43661531)
    You're remembering it wrong.
    They told him they needed a hero, but they never told him that he was going to lead the fleet. He thought it was going to be a defensive war.
    Also, they attacked Earth first (First Invasion; that's when they used Eros as the staging point, that's when humanity "discovered" the ansible and artificial gravity). Then they attacked again (Second Invasion; Mazer defended earth). After that, they realized that humanity was intelligent and they decided to stop trying to invade Earth.
    The Third Invasion was Ender attacking them.
  • Remember where the term "Speaker for the Dead" comes from (in-universe), though. Ender himself, anonymously, wrote The Hive Queen (also The Hegemon, though that's not relevant here) to tell the story from the perspective of the buggers, and that story is the one that the vast majority of the human universe read. Not an explanation of how the military treated him - if anything, that was covered up - and not the story of how humanity never had any other chance. Ender's goal was to give the Buggers a voice, to make humanity sympathetic toward them. If he was to succeed in that, it was neccessary that the one human who ordered the entire species wiped out be considered a monster. Sure, he could have (and it probably would have been more justified) pinned that on Graff, or on Mazer Rackham, or on any number of other people who put him in the position to unknowingly give that order... but that would have distracted from the story, and they didn't have the insight into the alien race that he did, anyhow. He made himself the scapegoat, accepting responsibility for what he did without knowing the consequences, because it made the story better, and thus furthered the goal of "speaking for the dead".

    As a sort of side note, a little over a hundred years ago, Americans who managed to kill an unusually large number of "Indians", or to hold out against them in desperate combat, were regarded as heroes. Today, they are still sometimes seen as legends, but also sometimes as monsters or at least murderers. From a time when "wiping them out" was perceived as a laudable goal, to a time when there is a sort of nationwide shame for what we did, in a mere century. That's without anything even remotely close to the impact of The Hive Queen (as described in Card's fiction), and without an actual, literal [g|x]enocide. Imagine how it will be viewed after another 400 centuries...

Saliva causes cancer, but only if swallowed in small amounts over a long period of time. -- George Carlin

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