He’d prefer to “leave it in the hands of people for whom that is their native language.”īut Arrival has Chiang’s approval: "I think it's that rarest of the rare in that it's both a good movie and a good adaptation… And when you consider the track record of adaptations of written science fiction, that's almost literally a miracle. If the other five movies make it to production, Chiang himself has little interest in being involved in the movies themselves. “None of these stories were stories that I thought could be made into movies,” Chiang admits. And while each of these works confronts a different idea and theme, they all share one thing in common: They’re unfilmable, at least a first blush. Considering Chiang has only published fifteen stories, that puts his potential book-to-Hollywood batting average at an impressive 0.400. Add to that two other stories that are currently in conversation with producers, we might be seeing as many as six adaptations movies in the next few years.
#Ted chiang story of your life audiobook software#
The story “Understand” is in production with 20th Century Fox, the novella "The Lifecycle of Software Objects" is under option by Brio Films (a producing partner or Michel Gondry's), and the story “Hell Is the Absence of God” has been optioned (though by whom is still a secret).
Heisserer will not be the last screenwriter faced with the challenge of adapting Chiang. This content can also be viewed on the site it originates from. But it’s arguably the script by Eric Heisserer that demands the most recognition for how it translates Chiang’s high-concept sci-fi so effortlessly. Villeneuve ( Sicario, next year’s Blade Runner sequel) conjures intimacy and muted tensions to a film of global scale. Amy Adams brings a precise, introspective performance to the film’s hero linguist Dr. Ted Chiang, perhaps the greatest living Science Fiction writer, has very little of his excellent fiction (a dozen stories, novellettes and novellas) available in the audio format.That is a bitter, bitter shame. Arrival is every bit as sophisticated as its short story origins, and magnificently translated into 2016’s best piece of cerebral science fiction. Which makes the film adaptation even more impressive for how faithful it is, down to the seven-armed aliens. In his story, Chiang even includes diagrams to illustrate how light refracts through water-and this moment is supposed to help clarify what’s going on. He addresses things like Fermat’s principle and the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis. Whereas most stories and films about first contact deal with confrontation, Chiang is interested in the very complicated basics of communication. This is the most important moment in our lives, and I want to pay attention, note. Denis Villeneuve’s latest, a heady sci-fi movie starring Amy Adams, is a pretty faithful adaptation of Ted Chiang’s “Story of Your Life,” a short story about an academic linguist trying to understand an alien language after twelve extraterrestrial vessels appear in various parts of the world. Your father is about to ask me the question.