The Forever War - Ridley Scott Returns to Sci-Fi


Ridley Scott is planning to return to the science fiction genre for the first time since Blade Runner and Alien. Fox 2000 has acquired the rights to Joe Haldeman’s 1974 novel The Forever War, which won both the 1975 Nebula Award and the 1976 Hugo Award.

The book tells the story of an interstellar war between humanity and the mysterious Tauran species, and deals with themes of the inhumanity of war and the results of time dilation space travel. The novel is also widely perceived to be based on the author’s military service during the Vietnam War. The plot description from the books cover follows:

“Private William Mandella is a hero in spite of himself — a reluctant conscript drafted into an elite military unit, and propelled through space and time to fight in a distant thousand-year conflict. He never wanted to go to war, but the leaders on Earth have drawn a line in the interstellar sand — despite the fact that their fierce alien enemy is unknowable, unconquerable, and very far away. So Mandella will perform his duties without rancor and even rise up through the military’s ranks . . . if he survives. But the true test of his mettle will come when he returns to Earth. Because of the time dilation caused by space travel the loyal soldier is aging months, while his home planet is aging centuries — and the difference will prove the saying: you never can go home. . .”

The war lasts about seven centuries while he only ages about 10 years. So imagine Flight of the Navigator to the 70th degree. The novel spawned two and a half sequels, Forever Free, Forever Peace and the novella A Seperate War (which is set parallel to Forever War). It is not known if Scott has intentions of creating a franchise, I would guess probably not.

It is also unclear when Scott will find time to tackle Forever War. I would assume that Scott will get Nottingham into production before a screenplay is completed. The concept of the book feels like a ig idea sci-fi film that would have been produced in the 1970’s. According to Variety, Scott has wanted to direct a big screen adaptation of Forever War for the last 25 years, but complications with rights holders delayed that from happening until now.

“I first pursued ‘Forever War’ 25 years ago, and the book has only grown more timely and relevant since,” Scott told the trade. “It’s a science-fiction epic, a bit of ‘The Odyssey’ by way of ‘Blade Runner,’ built upon a brilliant, disorienting premise.”

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  • GregS
    One of my favorite sf novels. Read it when it came out in paperback in 1976! Author Haldeman is a Viet Nam vet, wounded in combat. The novel is obviously a metaphor for that horrible conflict, and the plot device with the main characters coming back to an Earth hundreds of years after they left (due to relativistic time dilation) is a metaphor about the unwelcome homecoming the vets received after the war. It's quite good.
  • daverx1
    Awesome,

    One of my favourite books. One of my favourite directors, fitting that Scott should return to Sci Fi with such an epic tale, for anyone who's interested, google the movie title with his name and do a little snooping, Scott said he is going to have the movie shot in full 3-D, if this is anything near his work on Blade Runner or Alien, we will be talking about the amazingness of this film for decades!
  • Gavriel Magonet
    Just read the book on holiday. To me both the build up and then reveal of the very distant future was the stand out part of the book, it made me think of 2001 in a completely different way. I'm really excited about an adaptation and what a great challenge visualising all of those future earth's.
  • Wetleef
    I'd love to see John Steakley's Armor as a movie...

    ...yet I imagine it would be hard-pressed to see any director give justice to Felix seeing as he says very little...

    I think the largest challenge for any film would be to appropriate and characterize "the engine" on screen. Honestly, I don't see any way to communicate and identify it to an audience...

    *sigh
  • Allen Murphy
    I always thought The Forever War would make a GREAT film, on par with classics like 2001: A Space Oddysey. There's so much packed into such a short novel in terms of philosophy, politics, human nature, action, adventure - it's got it all! With Ridley Scott at the helm, I believe that this film will become a phenomenon.
  • Chris
    This should be a good flick. I don't think it has anything to do with IRAQ. This is a sci-fi that deals with the premise of "you can never really go home". Like in Vietnam, things changed drastically for the soldiers that left. Our all volunteer force of today is returning to the same U.S. that it left. These days, soldiers are hungry for a job. They want to be deployed. A soldier sitting around not on deployment is a bored man/woman wasting away. I know Special Forces guys that are out of the U.S. more than they're in it. Always volunteering for the next mission. I suppose reservists may see it differently.
  • Captain Awesome
    gocitizen,

    Last time I read, Scott said he wasn't sure on the script he did see. He said the script has to be done just right. I'm assuming it will happen after TFW.
  • Randy
    How a book written in 1974 can be considered propaganda against the Iraqi "conflict" is a reversal in time dialation and absurd. Haldeman's masterpiece is not about a dystopian future but about a man trapped into facing the inevitability of change and a 1000 year war fought over a "misunderstanding". Just like the latest Star Wars movies, some look at it as metaphorical propaganda against whowever is the "evil empire" of the times. Remember, history repeats itself which is why stories like this are timeless.
  • gocitizen
    Aye, Captain.

    So what happened to Brave New World? Did I miss the news on that being dropped?
  • south texas terror
    I liked what Im hearing. Alien is still one of my favs all time.
  • McGinty
    This is a great book. The fact that the warring planets are so far apart, the time to travel for battle always puts the attacking side hundreds of years behind in technology. Plus it's impossible to come to a peace agreement for the same reason. A fantastic premise and one I always wanted to see on film. Hope Scott can do it.
  • Captain Awesome
    Ezra doesn't know what the fuck...

    And I'm glad the two Titans of Sci-Fi are coming back. Cameron and Scott are always welcomed to revive the genre they helped refine into their own. If only Kubrick was still around.

    God knows the genre fucking needs it badly.
  • /m
    Ridley is coming back full circle!

    Perhaps the war scene will be something like 'Black Hawk Down' set in dystopia Blade Runner... but then again, Ridley have ways to surprise us in each of his movies.

    Can't wait to see this movie!.
  • giantyoda
    Wow - exciting stuff!!!
  • starrshortgore
    lol i thought you guys photoshopped james franco into that book cover
  • whsmith
    @Ezra
    Body of Lies is a half way decent action thriller, it has little or nothing to say about the Iraq war - it is just used as a backdrop IMO

    As for Forever War, you have no idea what you are talking about. The book is very much a product of the 70s and Vietnam - if they stick to the original story, it would highlight just how different society is from that era, if anything.

    ... But God forbid people should create movies with themes relevant in any way, even tangentially , to current events.
  • Bull
    Ezra - wtf are you talking about? This is based on a book written in the 70's, it has nothing to do with "Iraq" as much as you want it be. I guess a sci-fi war movie about time travel really gives a brash opinion about our current foreign policy.

    I hope Ridley Scott goes back to making decent films. Body of Lies looks like recycled garbage.
  • ajt
    why does the guy on the cover look like a cross between James Franco
    and Benicio Del Toro
  • Ezra
    Wow. Another blatant anti-Iraq war film. And right after Body of Lies flopped, too.

    And they say the business is motivated by money, not ideology.
  • danno
    I had a bout of "SPACE TIME DILATION" watching "The Happening", but in reverse. Whilst in the cinema I had aged dramatically while those outside looked sprightly and youthful.
  • danno
    This I like. The money up there, on the screen. A warm rush of nostalgia coursing through my popcorn addled blood.
  • Gajonka
    THIS IS GREAT. JOE HALDEMAN CAME TO MY COLLEGE 10 YEARS AGO AND DID A READING. THE GUY IS LEGIT. NOW, WHICH ROLE WILL RUSSELL CROWE PLAY? LOL
  • ckybltz
    Id prefer if Scott would just direct Ender's Game....but I suppose this is pretty awesome news too.
  • GOD YES
  • GregoryV
    FINALLY! I'm very excited to hear Ridley Scott doing a Sci-Fi film. My prayers have been answered!

    Anyways, what I'm really excited is that SPACE TIME DILATION is being used. Ever since watching, "Aim for the Top! Gunbuster" and "Voices of a Distant Star," I've always wondered if there's a director in Hollywood could explore it because I feel space time dilation in a film adds another level of human emotion. I think it's amazing. I'm sure there's other films that uses space time dilation, so please, do tell.

    So yes, I'm very excited to hear Ridley Scotts new project.
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