The Earth may not be our home forever. Eventually, we may have to leave. What if instead of finding a potentially habitable ...
Adaptations have been around for as long as entertainment itself. When inspiration runs dry, books inevitably become a rich hunting ground for filmmakers, playwrights, and more recently, game ...
Jeff Sneider is the Senior Film Reporter at Collider, where he breaks film and television news and curates the Up-and-Comer of the Month column in addition to hosting The Sneider Cut podcast and the ...
Somebody told me about Dyson spheres in the mid-1970s. Maybe it was Poul Anderson. Freeman Dyson’s revolutionary construction had habitats and widgetry of any description surrounding a star. Point was ...
Syfy previously developed the books as a four-hour miniseries with William S. Todman Jr. and Edward Milstein as exec producers. A bit of trivia — Ringworld was part of the same 2013 Syfy longform ...
Larry Niven’s Hugo-winning novel from 1971 has a surprising amount in common with network television’s biggest sci-fi hit. But what’s really interesting is how Ringworld differs from Lost. Now, the ...
With sequels, the question that usually comes to mind is “why?” Further cash-in of a profitable series? A showcase of a game studio’s new technology? Or a genuine effort to continue and improve on the ...
It was rather quietly announced last September that screenwriter and producer Akiva Goldsman had signed a deal with Amazon and its producing partner MGM to develop Larry Niven’s classic 1970 science ...
The question of just how inspired Bungie was by Larry Niven's Ringworld series has been quietly boiling in the background and bubbles up every time a new Halo comes around. Of course, burden for this ...
Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook Ringworld centers on Louis Gridley Wu, a human who begins the first novel while celebrating his ...
(Lev Grossman writes about books here on Wednesdays. Subscribe to his RSS feed.) You know how it is with your literary heroes — you never want to stop crapping on about how great they are. (“Crapping ...
Somebody told me about Dyson spheres in the mid-1970s. Maybe it was Poul Anderson. Freeman Dyson’s revolutionary construction had habitats and widgetry of any description surrounding a star. Point was ...
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