Author Topic: Mortal Engines - a literary review  (Read 1669 times)

Draco84oz

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Mortal Engines - a literary review
« on: June 06, 2018, 07:04:14 am »
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IRsFc2gguEg

Given that the full trailer for Mortal Engines has now been released, I figured it might be time to reminisce about my experience with the original books. Whilst I have no doubt that the movie will be spectacular (lets face it, its Peter Jackson's apprentice in the director's chair, and the man himself is in the producer's role), some of the things I've seen in the trailer, plus my recollection of the books have lead me to pause.

And don't worry, I won't spoil anything important.

The Mortal Engines Quartet is a series of young adult books written by Phillip Reeve, and first published in 2001. I first found these books whilst roaming Wikipedia, and the concept behind them interested me enough that I bought them through ebay. The series is set in a post-apocalyptic world (after the "Sixty Minute War"), where most of the old cities have been mobilised, either through massive wheels or tank treads, and hunt each other for fuel and population growth - a system known as "Municipal Darwinisim."

Whilst the first book is actually a good adventure romp, and does a good set up of the world and characters, it loses some of it sheen early in the second book, and completely loses it by the fourth, although he doesn pick up towards the end, and the final climax of the series is kinda spectacular - I can't wait to see what WETA does with it. But the characters end up being somewhat one-dimensional, and some of the situations are a little contrived - Tom in particular doesn't seem to go through much of a character arc throughout all four books (and honestly, I can imagine him with the same dumbfounded look on his face all the way through), Hester seems to range between angry and sociopathic, and sometime seem to switch with no reason, and I honestly can't see how the heck the two would end up together apart from the fact that they've spent so much time together...in the six months between books one and two. And if their adventures in that time frame are anything like the adventures described in the books...yeaaaahhhh....

And, I'll be blunt, the books aren't for kids. There are some fairly heavy themes at work here - slavery, vivisection, reanimating corpses for millitary purposes, biological weaponry, genocide, suicide bombers, conscription, total war, child abuse. I actually felt sick part way through the third and fourth books...especially since one part of the fourth book was Hester just killing people, and I was thinking "...why is he describing this, and where is it going?"

Truth is, after I read the books once through, I gave them to a local bookstore to sell second-hand, as I had no interest in reading them again. I felt the exact same a few years later when I gave my collection of A Song of Ice and Fire to the same shop, mostly for the same reasons. Whilst I can see why people would like these books and the setting, I can't see the movies past the first doing well, unless there's some rewrites going on. But hey, its Peter Jackson and co. again - you never know.

Call me somewhat intrigued, but I'll wait for the reviews.

Dakkar

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Re: Mortal Engines - a literary review
« Reply #1 on: June 06, 2018, 04:36:37 pm »
I can't get over the goofiness (and bad science) of having the mass of cities driving around. About the same violation of basic force and power needs equations as Starkiller Base, and on a similar scale beyond suspension of disbelief.
(Probably also why I'll never be a fan of Attack on Titan)

Jackson can sell a lot with cool visuals though, so we'll see.

The only work featuring literal Cities fighting that I recall liking engaged in supernatural and symbolic presence to invoke effective horror; and that was Clive Barker's short story "In the hills, the Cities".
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Landlubber

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Re: Mortal Engines - a literary review
« Reply #2 on: June 08, 2018, 12:33:16 am »
Watched the trailer last night.

Cities on giant tank treads, airships, dudes in top hats with exotic weaponry, Hugo Weaving as the bad guy...sign me up. Never read the books, likely won't, and the movie seems like it'll make as much sense as Pacific Rim, but it looks dang cool.
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Dakkar

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Re: Mortal Engines - a literary review
« Reply #3 on: June 08, 2018, 02:48:12 pm »
it'll make as much sense as Pacific Rim, but it looks dang cool.

Probably the best way to recommend it and think about it... I'm back in! :-)
"History is-a made at night. Character is what you are in the dark!"
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Landlubber

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Re: Mortal Engines - a literary review
« Reply #4 on: June 09, 2018, 11:35:55 am »
Well...the reason that worked for Pacific Rim is because the movie didn't take itself seriously. The Mortal Engines looks like it's trying to be more serious. Just my impression from the trailer.

But I'm still going to see it. Even if it's a crappy movie, I think it'll still be a visual smorgasbord, and will likely be better than 90% of the other dreck Hollywood churns out these days.
"Sometimes, you gotta roll the hard six."--Commander Adama