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Sci-Fi Books Television

'Three-Body Problem' Animation Sci-Fi Series Starts Next Month (gizmodo.com) 46

"Cixin Liu's sci-fi novel The Three-Body Problem can't stop jumping to other formats," reports Gizmodo: In addition to next year's Netflix series from The Terror: Infamy's Alexander Woo and Game of Thrones creators David Benioff and DB Weiss, last year saw the release of a serialized podcast (different from the audiobook version).

And for 2022, we've got an animated series that's premiering actually pretty soon.

Come December 3, an anime version of The Three-Body Problem will release on the Chinese streaming platform Bilibili. This series was originally announced in 2019 with a trailer, but things have been fairly quiet on that front up until now. Developed by CG studio YHTK Entertainment in partnership with The Three-Body Universe, a studio built specifically for the purpose of managing the franchise, a new trailer for the upcoming anime was released earlier in the week during a Bilibili anime showcase.

"Having enjoyed the book, I think it looks promising," writes Slashdot reader Camembert. The 2008 book was the first in Liu's hard sci-fi series Remembrance of Earth's Past — and according to Gizmodo, this is just the beginning: Bilibili's adaptation is the first of a larger initiative called the Three-Body Global Creator Project. Per the press release, animation studios across the world are permitted to explore the Remembrance franchise to showcase its global potential through various art and animation styles....

And if animation or Netflix aren't your bag, Tencent Video has made a live action version of The Three-Body Problem, though that version has yet to receive a release date.

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'Three-Body Problem' Animation Sci-Fi Series Starts Next Month

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  • by r1348 ( 2567295 ) on Saturday November 12, 2022 @09:02PM (#63046555)

    It's visually interesting and it's not shy to represent asian charachters as asian, something that even Japanese anime often neglects.
    The trailer seems to cover a lot. It shows the Judgement Day ship and the Wallfacers, which aren't even in the same book. It doesn't seem to contain anything from the third book though. It's still a lot of plot to fit in a single series, I hope they don't cut too much, especially the parts during the Cultural Revolution that kickstart the whole story.

    • It's visually interesting and it's not shy to represent asian charachters as asian, something that even Japanese anime often neglects.

      Japanese anime doesn't neglect that, is an intentional choice

    • It's visually interesting and it's not shy to represent asian charachters as asian, something that even Japanese anime often neglects.

      What? Anime series simply often have foreign characters, ostensibly because they had a character design they liked and don't really have a problem with representation in Japan, which is 97.9% Japanese.

  • by Travco ( 1872216 ) on Saturday November 12, 2022 @09:19PM (#63046579)
    As a lifelong SF reader (60 years worth), the only book I've read that was MORE boring was Lord of the Rings and that at least had "tramp tramp oh no Orcs kill kill kill ouch i stubbed my toe"
    • by Tom ( 822 )

      It still touched you enough to bother writing a comment about it here.

      • He just wanted us all to know that he's a slow reader. A fast one can read literally the whole series in a day.

    • Try reading Neal Stephenson's Baroque Cycle...that'll give you a new #1 most boring. I've read a good chunk of his other stuff, but I just haven't been able to get myself to start the second book in that series.

  • by EreIamJH ( 180023 ) on Saturday November 12, 2022 @09:31PM (#63046599)

    I think it was how the characters were bugging me because they didn't react in ways I was expecting. But then I realised that I was expecting them to behave like the egocentric "I'm the hero of my own story" kind of characters western scifi writers create, whereas in the books the characters behaved like they were supporting cast in a bigger story.

  • by oumuamua ( 6173784 ) on Saturday November 12, 2022 @09:48PM (#63046625)
    Before this book I had heard nothing of the "Dark Forest" explanation to the Fermi Paradox:
    We haven't seen aliens because they know to stay hidden lest the dominant power take them out.
    Kind of like offensive realism taken to the galactic scale: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
  • I thought the first book was interesting, and it held my attention.

    Then i read the 2nd book, and i barely remember reading it. I'm not even sure i finished it. Totally lost interest.

  • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Sunday November 13, 2022 @02:02AM (#63046829)

    That book was boring as hell. I could not finish it. My conclusing back when I tried to read it was recycling of ideas long since established in SF for a more general audience and dumbed down.

  • torn (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Tom ( 822 ) on Sunday November 13, 2022 @03:14AM (#63046933) Homepage Journal

    So torn about this one. I love the books, really amazing stuff. But will it translate into a movie? There's so much that is left to fill in by your own imagination, which you can't do in a visual medium. For example, the main aliens, the Trisolarans, are never described in detail in the books. I still have no idea what they're supposed to look like. And that's perfectly fine. Their exact biology (how many legs and arms?) never matters to the story. I'm not sure I want to have that blank in my head filled with anything.

    • There is a fourth book, written by a fan, which has been at least partially accepted by Liu, published and is for sale.
      It's quite good, for what is essentially fan fiction, and also attempts to describe the Trisolarians.

      The Redemption of Time.

      • by Tom ( 822 )

        I have it and started reading the first few pages. For some reason, it didn't catch me so far, but we'll see.

  • The book was written to unite Chinese people against foreign powers and to praise Mao Zedong and the Communist party. As a bonus, blue-haired weenies in the West, living with their parents, get white-washed ideas about how wonderful Socialism is. This is the new Cold War.

    • Didn't read the book did ya. In fact, the first book is a scathing critic of Mao's cultural revolution and I'm surprised it even got published in China. The 2nd and 3rd book go into pure scifi and barely mention China.
      • You have no idea. I read it in Chinese when I lived in China. It is obvious why the book was not banned in China - it is very strongly patriotic, favoring the current regime and blaming the old for problems in the past. This fits the current narrative of CCP perfectly. From the point of view of a Chinese citizen, the original Chinese version tries to rally them against the "evil" West. It's subtle, but you can get the same feeling from the English version, it just doesn't have the same effect on people

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