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Science Fiction
Welcome to /c/ScienceFiction
December book club canceled. Short stories instead!
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I can see that. The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy movie felt really comfy. I read the book, but it did not draw me in, for some reason. Any particular novel you like, other than obviously The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy?
I felt the same way. I got about 2/3 of the way through the book and just did not GAF about a single character, so I tried the movie and it was much better. I haven't read any of his others.
For me it's The Expanse.
And also pretty much anything by Philip K Dick.
Huh, surprised you mention Philip K. Dick. I read a lot of his short stories and found them anything but comfy. Rather, depressing and gloomy.
As for the Expanse, I just read the Leviathan Wakes, and yeah, I really enjoyed the vibe
The Martian. Both the book and the movie
Same author (Andy Weir), different book: "Project Hail Mary". Almost a spiritual successor to "The Martian" and gives you cozy feels AF.
Loved it it's much more "fantastic", ie mind inspiring. Also there's gonna be a movie!
I loved the book. Tried enjoying the movie three times, I think, then finally realized that the book is way better.
Murderbot of course (Martha Wells), also The Wayfarers series by Becky Chambers. Also her novella To Be Taught, If Fortunate
Firefly is maximum comfy.
Still on my to-watch list
I don't know if I should upvote you for having it on your list or downvote you for not having watched it already...
But wasn't it cancelled? I'm not sure I want to watch something if the ending is missing.
The movie Serenity was made to provide an ending.
"I am a leaf on the wind; watch how I soar"
wipes away tears
I didn't feel a lack of closure. It was still a few years before mass serialization of TV so episodes are largely self contained. There's a movie that came out afterwards that gives some answers to a few questions that weren't wrapped up.
Agree. For me the problem with it ending too soon is mostly that I liked it and wanted more , but it wasn’t really a single overarching story that needed an ending.
Contrast it with Babylon 5 where the overall story arc was everything
Ok, don't downvote, I watched the movie!
The movie is great, but it makes more sense after you’ve watched the series.
Yeah this is my answer as well.
My wife and I have a Valentine's Day tradition of getting Chinese takeout and starting the series.
We have a child named after a character.
Stitch Hessian?
Badger?
Blue Gloves?
Mr. Universe?
I've heard of this. is it scifi? it always sounded like a YA novel title.
oh shit is there a film version?? I can't read
It's what the Han Solo movie should have been.
The adventures of a lovable rag tag crew doing whatever's needed on the fringes of settled space to keep their transport ship flying for another run.
10 episodes of a prematurely cancelled show due to the incompetence of Fox plus a movie called Serenity which wraps up what should have been the rest of season 1. It's about a crew that does odd jobs in a Rimworld/space cowboy-esque theme.
I just watched it again for like the nth time. It's still so good. It has Nathan Filion, Jewel Staite, Morena Baccarin and the fantastic Summer Glau!
The show is great, although i have noticed how it has a pretty high amount of shots of Summer Glau's feet. Just Summer Glau walking and the camera panning to her feet, over and over, almost every episode. It doesn't even make sense because the spaceship is made of metal grates and sheets, not carpet.
I'm guessing the show runner was into feet. But other than that, the show is pretty wholesome.
It has my all time favorite TV theme song too (ok, maybe tied with Trème).
Just finished Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir. It's a fun and wholesome scifi story.
Great pick. I read that over the summer and found it both excellent and uplifting! It really showcases a shining example of humanity we should strive for
Indeed! I would say "The Martian" also fits.
The 1973 BBC Radio Dramatization of Asimov's Foundation. It's about eight hours long and the voice work is quite good. It's comfortable for me to listen to and come back to, very digestible. One complaint: I've yet to find a version that had properly equalized sound levels, so the comfortable listing volume for their speech throughout the work is suddenly jarringly loud when they switch to the machine-clacking "encyclopedia" segments that serve as segues between parts of the story. Other than that, I have no complaints: It's a fairly faithful adaptation of the original work, and does not suffer from the fatigue and dating many other works do (in my opinion, audio balancing notwithstanding).
On the topic of The Matrix, I'm surprised by the number of people who think that Matrix 1 2 & 3 are the only Matrices. In my opinion, The Animatrix is better than both sequels combined, by a lot, and most people seem to have never heard of it. If you're a fan of The Matrix, watch The Animatrix!
I remember watching it back in the days. Some of the "parts" were a bit too weird (especially the animation) for my taste, but yeah, I enjoyed it overall.
I've found myself rereading Old Man's War multiple times.
Anything written by Becky Chambers is like a comfy blanket for your soul. She puts so much humanity and empathy in stories about aliens.
I adore the book The 5th Gender but it's worth knowing in advance its also gay smut 😅
It's really sweet and romantic gay smut though 🥺 and to be fair the sci-fi and mystery elements are genuinely fantastic. At the beginning I was worried it was gonna be overly quirky, just ignore that part. Its endearing quirky, I swear.
Pretty much any of the Wayfarers books by Becky Chambers, not so much for familiarity or nostalgia but because that’s intentionally part of their vibe
For me it's definitely a book that often doesn't get much love: Spin by Robert Charles Wilson. I read that book like ten times by now in both English and my mother tongue. Such a defining book for me since I first read it in my youth and it gave me a lot of food for thought regarding what it means to live a meaningful life. It is not really hardcore sci-fi after all but more a kind of coming-of-age novel that happens to take place in a sci-fi setting.
The books Walkaway (Cory Doctorow) and Accelerando (Charles Stross) both give me nostalgia for a time when the future seemed like an exciting challenge instead of an unbearable one.
My favorite all time movie is Interstellar but I wouldn’t call it comforting or cozy
I loved Orson Scott Card’s Ender and Alvin cycle
YSK Card had some problematic words regarding LGBT community at some point but made amend since. I read the books before hearing about that, and that’s something I wish I had known of. You might want to check his words before giving him your money.
I guess one cozy and comforting show would be some old stuff from my youth like Stargate SG1, X-Files or Sliders maybe? Something that I would put on a screen like an old friend and doing something else in the meantime.
Here's some I consider cozy:
- Asimov's R. Daniel Olivaw Trilogy starting with "The Caves of Steel" is downright cozy.
- Nathan Lowell's "Quarter Share" and the other "Tales from the Golden Age of the Solar Clipper".
And if you like to listen to books, "Quarter Share" is available as a podcast: https://chartable.com/podcasts/quarter-share/episodes
Edit: It varies by book, but many chapters of "The Vorkosigan Saga" are downright cozy.
Certain episodes of Star Trek TNG are that way for me.
A lot of Futurama is this way as well.
I don't know how many times I've listened through the audiobook of Andy Weir's The Martian.
Another one... Ell Donsaii series. It's light but nice to read and quite interesting in a science fiction kinda way
Inception (2010)
Do comics count? If so, Freefall. Philosophy, ethics, science, questioning what it truly means to be human, and all while never losing its sense of humor.
Octavia E. Butler's Xenogenesis trilogy (also known as Lilith's Brood Trilogy). I've listened to the audiobook narrated by Barrett Aldrich four times now, and I always discover some new angle to the story.