Essayer OR - Gratuit
Colour me olo, there's a new kid in town
PC Pro
|August 2025
Laser-wielding scientists have discovered a new colour, but unlike sci-fi equivalents it's unlikely to turn the world into ash
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I've expressed my feelings about science fiction many times before in this column. Probably too many. A big fan in my 1960s teens, a bout of illness in the 1970s let me binge all the greats - Vonnegut, Ballard, LeGuin, Dick, Pohl, Bester - overdosing so badly that I never wanted to read sci-fi again. Looking back now as emotionally retarded pseudo-intellectual sci-fi fans appear to be taking over the world, I think my immune system was telling me something. However, this allergic reaction doesn’t apply to the closely related genre of fantasy (or gothic, or cosmic) horror. I still can cringe a little to M P Shiel’s The Purple Cloud, William Hope Hodgson’s The House on the Borderland or the entire oeuvre of H P Lovecraft.
One of Lovecraft’s stories, “The Colour out of Space”, struck me particularly hard. A meteorite lands in a tiny community in the New England woods, containing globules of a weird colour that isn’t in the solar spectrum: it has unpleasant effects that consume all living animals, plants and humans and turn them into grey ash. Several unsuccessful attempts have been made to film this story; hard work given that it’s not in the Technicolor spectrum either. Perhaps the nearest anyone has come is Alex Garland’s 2018
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition August 2025 de PC Pro.
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