Pixel Scroll 7/16/18 Now With Bolded Typos

(1) GONE WITH THE YUAN. The most expensive film ever made in China bombed and is already out of theaters. The Hollywood Reporter has the story — “China’s First $100M Film Pulled From Cinemas After Disastrous Opening Weekend”.

In the long lead-up to its release, Chinese fantasy epic Asura was promoted as China’s most expensive film ever made, with a production budget of over $110 million (750 million yuan). So perhaps it’s unsurprising that the film’s producers, which include Jack Ma’s Alibaba Pictures, decided to take desperate action after the movie opened to just $7.1 million over the weekend.

Late Sunday evening in Beijing, Asura‘s official social media accounts posted a simple statement saying that the film would be pulled from cinemas as of 10 p.m. local time. After landing in theaters with limited fanfare, China’s priciest picture ever would vanish from the scene entirely.

Asura is co-produced by Zhenjian Film Studio and Ningxia Film Group — two of the investors behind the successful Painted Skin fantasy franchise — along with Alibaba Pictures Group and other minority investors.

The statement announcing Asura‘s retreat from cinemas supplied no explanation for the unprecedented move. But a representative from Zhenjian Film, which is credited as lead producer, later told Chinese news site Sina: “This decision was made not only because of the bad box office. We plan to make some changes to the film and release it again.”

Chinese site Sixth Tone tells it this way: “Epic Budget, Epic Fail: Chinese Blockbuster ‘Asura’ Tanks”.

China’s latest fantasy epic, “Asura,” claimed to be the most expensive domestic production to date — but it didn’t even last three days in cinemas.

Six years in the making, the film was planned as the first of a trilogy based on ancient Tibetan mythology. The Alibaba Pictures production promised lush CGI from an award-winning, international team in its depiction of war between two heavenly realms. Marketing campaigns for the film emphasized its budget of $100 million.

But after opening on Friday, the film made a mere $7.1 million over its first weekend. By contrast, “Hidden Man,” a highly anticipated action-thriller by actor and director Jiang Wen, brought in $46.5 million. Meanwhile “Dying to Survive,” a dark comedy about cancer drug smuggling operations, defended its box office lead, racking up $68.5 million on its second weekend and even prompting a spike in online insurance sales.

Aggregate user ratings of “Asura” varied wildly across China’s two biggest ticketing platforms, Tencent-funded Maoyan and Alibaba-owned Tao Piaopiao, earning 4.9 and 8.4 out of 10, respectively. Users of review platform Douban rated the film a miserable 3.1 out of 10.

(2) EFFECTS OF COMIC CON PROLIFERATION. Heidi MacDonald tells Publishers Weekly readers why “In a World of Too Many Cons, San Diego Is Still King”.

An ever-increasing number of comics and pop culture conventions are taxing publishers’ exhibition budgets and turning artists into nomads, on the road signing autographs in a different city or country every weekend….

Indeed, the expanding comics convention schedule is beginning to tax publisher budgets while turning comics creators into a hardened (and often exhausted) group of road warriors who must trek to a different city every weekend.

As more and more events flood the schedule, publishers and creators alike are developing new strategies for dealing with the demands for their time. And the conventions are beginning to evolve, some developing business models to stay above the pack of newly launched shows, while others, including many poorly planned and financed events, are becoming synonymous with disaster, poor attendance, canceled events, and disappointed fans.

“The number of cons has really exploded over the last five years,” says Martha Donato, president of MAD Events Management, which puts on the Long Beach Comic Con every September, along with other shows. “It’s [become] every city, every weekend, all year, globally.”

Even for a location such as Long Beach, Calif., close to many West Coast comics publishers, the competition for guest artists and publisher-exhibitors has become fierce, she says. “A much bigger percentage of our time, energy, and resources are now devoted to getting exhibitors to attend,” she adds. “Talent and their publishers have many more offers than they could ever accept, even if they wanted to.”

Donato’s show gets support from publishers in Los Angeles, including Top Cow and Aspen, but even loyal exhibitors have to pick and choose. “Publishers are facing a deluge of opportunities and they can afford to be choosy,” says Donato. “There’s a lot of saying no.”

(3) RECASTING MUPPETS MOVIES. The most selfless answer is….

(4) TODAY IN HISTORY

  • July 16, 1955 Commando Cody: Sky Marshal of the Universe premiered on the small screen
  • July 16, 1958The Fly creeped the heck out of everybody…”Help Me…Help Me.”
  • July 16, 2005 — The 6th book in J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series sold 6.9 million copies in its first 24 hours.

(5) TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS

  • Born July 16, 1928 – Robert Sheckley
  • Born July 16 – Will Ferrell, 51. Holmes in the forthcoming comedy Holmes and Watson film,  HerculesHappily Ever After: Fairy Tales for Every ChildCurious George and The Last Man on Earth series.
  • Born July 16 – Corey Feldman, 47. Genre roles in Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter, one of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles film series, the animated Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles,Tales from the Crypt and The Crow: Stairway to Heaven series to name but a few of his files.
  • Born July 16 – Rose Salazar, 33. Genre work includes American Horror StoryMaze Runner: The Death Cure, and Batman: Arkham Origins video game.

(6) COMICS SECTION.

  • Updating a Kafka classic at Bizarro.

(7) THE TIDE IS IN. Camestros Felapton continues scoping out the Hugo nominees: “Review: The Black Tides of Heaven (Novella) J.Y.Yang”.

As I said above, I found the second half easier to engage with than the first. It focuses more on Akeha, the surpising “spare” half of the twins, who in post-adolesence decides to be confirmed as a male (gender is assigned post-childhood in this world). Fate, prophercy, control and inevitability (whether magical or political) play out as important themes but, again, I think their impact as ideas get lost amid the scale of the story.

(8) IN ORDER. Mark Kaedrin gives his rankings and his reasons — “Hugo Awards: Short Stories”.

In the past five years of reading Hugo nominated short stories, I think I’ve enjoyed about 2-3 of the stories quite a bit. That’s… not a very good batting average. For whatever reason, I always find that this category just fills up with stories that don’t work for me. True, several puppy trolling nominations made the cut, which didn’t help (for example: they nominated SF-themed erotica two years in a row, and then another that was a bad parody of a bad story, etc…), but even the stories I liked weren’t that great. I’ve always chalked that up to this category having the lowest barrier to entry. It doesn’t take a whole lot of time or effort to seek out a bunch of short stories (mostly available for free online too), so the nominations are spread far and wide. There used to be a requirement that a finalist had to have at least 5% of the nominations in order to be considered, which often resulted in a small category because most stories couldn’t clear that bar. So basically, the stories that do make it here rarely have wide appeal. That being said, this year’s nominees are actually a pretty congenial bunch. I don’t actually hate any of the stories, even if a few don’t quite tweak me the way I’d like (even those are pretty good though). I do still find it hard to believe that these are the actual best short fiction of the year, but I’ll take this over the past 4 years’ worth of nominations. However, I do think it’s telling that at least one story on the 1942 Retro Hugos ballot, Proof by Hal Clement, is far better than any of these nominees, which I think says something (I’d have to read/reread a couple of the other 1942 finalists to be sure, but I suspect that ballot is more my speed). Anyway, let’s get to it….

(9) CURRENT EVENTS. And don’t forget this year’s fiction. Rocket Stack Rank hasn’t — “July 2018 Ratings”. Greg Hullender summarizes:

We posted our monthly ratings last night. It was a typical month, with 11 stories recommended (with 4 or 5 stars) out of 72 (expected would be 11 to 13).

We recommended 4 stories from F&SF, 3 from Asimov’s,  2 from Analog had 2. The other two were in Beneath Ceaseless Skies and Lightspeed. Over time, the three print and seven online magazines we follow split the recommendations 50/50 (not counting stand-alone novellas or original anthologies), and the print magazines only come out 6 times a year, so this isn’t quite as lopsided as it looks, but it was definitely a good month for the traditional three magazines.

(10) START YOUR COCKY CAREER. This article on “Cocky-gate” also seems to be a great blueprint for how to use Kindle Unlimited to give you a 6-figure salary. Let The Verge tell you about it: “Bad Romance”.

…The fight over #Cockygate, as it was branded online, emerged from the strange universe of Amazon Kindle Unlimited, where authors collaborate and compete to game Amazon’s algorithm. Trademark trolling is just the beginning: There are private chat groups, ebook exploits, conspiracies to seed hyperspecific trends like “Navy SEALs” and “mountain men,” and even a controversial sweepstakes in which a popular self-published author offered his readers a chance to win diamonds from Tiffany’s if they reviewed his new book.

Much of what’s alleged is perfectly legal, and even technically within Amazon’s terms of service. But for authors and fans, the genre is also a community, and the idea that unethical marketing and algorithmic tricks are running rampant has embroiled their world in controversy. Some authors even believe that the financial incentives set up by Kindle Unlimited are reshaping the romance genre — possibly even making it more misogynistic.

A genre that mostly features shiny, shirtless men on its covers and sells ebooks for 99 cents a pop might seem unserious. But at stake are revenues sometimes amounting to a million dollars a year, with some authors easily netting six figures a month. The top authors can drop $50,000 on a single ad campaign that will keep them in the charts — and see a worthwhile return on that investment….

(11) THEY’VE GOT ‘RITHIM. Or you can try this route–sell your old pb’s for hundreds or thousands of dollars each on Amazon. The New York Times has the story: “Amazon’s Curious Case of the $2,630.52 Used Paperback”.

Even a casual browse through the virtual corridors of Amazon reveals an increasingly bizarre bazaar where the quaint policies of physical bookstores — the stuff no one wants is piled on a cart outside for a buck a volume — are upended. John Sladek, who wrote perceptive science fiction about robotics and artificial intelligence, predicted in a 1975 story that computers might start making compelling but false connections:

If you’re trying to reserve a seat on the plane to Seville, you’d get a seat at the opera instead. While the person who wants the opera seat is really just making an appointment with a barber, whose customer is just then talking to the box-office of “Hair,” or maybe making a hairline reservation …

Mr. Sladek, who died in 2000, is little read now, which naturally means his books are often marketed for inordinate sums on Amazon. One of his mystery novels, “Invisible Green,” has a Red Rhino “buy box” — Amazon’s preferred deal — offering it for $664.

That is a real bargain compared with what a bookseller with the improbable name Supersonic Truck is asking: $1,942. (Copies from other booksellers are as little as $30.) Supersonic Truck, which Amazon says has 100 percent positive ratings, did not respond to a message seeking comment.

Ms. Macgillivray, who has published eight novels, said she had been poking around Amazon’s bookstore and was more perplexed than ever by the pricing.

“There’s nothing illegal about someone listing an item for sale at whatever the market will bear, even if they don’t have the book but plan to buy it when someone orders it,” she said. “At the same time, I would think Amazon wouldn’t want their platform used for less than honorable practices.”

(12) READERCON PORTRAITS. Paul Di Filippo shares photos of “Some Members of Fictionmags Attending Readercon 2018 “ at The Inferior 4.

In order of appearance: Ellen Datlow, Fred Lerner, Gary Wolfe, George Morgan, Gordon van Gelder, Henry Wessells, Jess Nevins, Michael Dirda, Peter Halasz, Scott Andrews, Scott Edelman, Sheila Williams, Steve Dooner, Mark Walsh.

(13) ONCE MORE WITH FEELING. And Daniel Dern covered the non-human population at ReaderCon, photographing this “alternative SJW credential.”

An ‘edge-‘og (hedgehog). (Not mine.)

Yeah, the SF context isn’t visible, would you take my word for it?

(14) ICE DELIVERY. NPR tells what it’s like for locals: “Massive Iceberg Looms Over A Village In Greenland”.

The photographs are stunning: a giant mountain of ice towers over a tiny village, with colorful homes reminiscent of little doll houses against the stark, blue-gray landscape.

But for the people living in those houses – that beauty could be life-threatening.

“It’s kind of like, if you lived in the suburbs, and you woke up one morning and looked out, and there was a skyscraper next to your house,” says David Holland, an oceanographer at New York University who does research in Greenland during the summer months. “I’d be the first to get out of there.”

He says that’s why authorities have taken action to evacuate those living closest to the water from the village of Innaarsuit, where the iceberg has parked itself just off the coast. According to the BBC, the village has just 169 residents.

(15) THE IMPORTANCE OF POORFEADING. “Harry, it s***s” — just not quite so badly: “Aliens killed by spelling mistake in 2013 Colonial Marines game”.

An infamously dreadful 2013 Aliens video game is now believed to have fallen victim to the most chilling of threats in the universe: a typo.

Aliens: Colonial Marines was released on PC, PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 to terrible reviews.

Many of them mentioned how badly the artificial intelligence (AI) behaved.

But it has now emerged that a single stray “a” in the game’s code may have been to blame.

Videos on YouTube show the game’s AI characters – the aliens and human teammates the player doesn’t control – ignoring threats, shooting wildly at nothing or standing in the line of fire.

(16) EARLY BRADBURY. David Doering has been digging through ancient fanzines and found a curiosity: “Here’s a little gift for you: a verse by Ray Bradbury himself–likely never before reprinted in the history of, well, like poetry or something. And maybe for some reason…”

VERSE OF THE IMAGI-NATION

“TIs a Sinema”
by Ray Bradbury

I think that I shall never see
Flash Gordon as he ought to be.
Midst growls of pain & awful lafter
each Saturday I see a chapter.
I cannot bear to see him more
for he Is really such a bore.

& Tarzan! too, is all so poor:
A shrinking violet demure
who beats upon his frazzled chest
& turns his puss into the west
to roar defiance with…”Fresh fish!
–I think that he’s a lousy dish…

From: Imagination, v. 1, issue 11, whole no. 11, August 1938

[Thanks to David Doering, Chip Hitchcock, JJ, Mike Kennedy, StephenfromOttawa, Brian Z., Martin Morse Wooster, Andrew Porter, Cat Eldridge, Greg Hullender, Bill Burns, John King Tarpinian, and Carl Slaughter for some of these stories. Title credit goes to File 770 contributing editor of the day Mix Mat.]

69 thoughts on “Pixel Scroll 7/16/18 Now With Bolded Typos

  1. 3) 12 Angry Men, with Lee J. Cobb remaining.

    I’ll go back to the corner now.

  2. Soon Lee: Kermit replaces Liam Neeson’s character in “Taken”…

    “I don’t know who you are. I don’t know what you want. If you are looking for ransom I can tell you I don’t have money, but what I do have are a very particular set of skills. Skills I have acquired over a very long career. Skills that make me a nightmare for people like you. If you let Miss Piggy go now that’ll be the end of it. I will not look for you, I will not pursue you, but if you don’t, I will look for you, I will find you and I will be very green and play the banjo and sing to you.”

  3. @JJ: “MURDERBOT NOVEL!!!”

    OMGWTFBBQ! 😀 I hope they use the theme song someone (@Peer?) came up with hereabouts. . . . Wut, books don’t have theme songs? Aw! Seriously, thanks for the info; that’s great!

    @Rev. Bob: Wait, Darren is more like the only Muppet on the show. 😉 Poor guy!

  4. @2:

    [president of MAD Events Management, which puts on the Long Beach Comic Con every September] Donato foresees the establishment of some kind of “better con bureau” that can validate which shows and organizers are financially responsible and competently organized

    As if. Can you say “restraint of trade suit?” Sure you can!

    @11: I don’t know whether I’m more fascinated by the suggestion that Amazon thinks it can determine whether you actually read something you’ve downloaded, or appalled that they might be able to. But I’m not surprised that people are gaming their system; sometimes it seems to me that their entire business model is not “less honorable business practices” than “we’re smarter than our customers”.

    @August: I’m not surprised that error came out of a bad environment; the reports about the overall quality even after the game was fixed don’t suggest anything good.

  5. @ OLeg89

    Friend of mine is looking for fiction with good portrayals of neurodivergent people in primeval/prehistoric or Tolkienesque settings. Any recommendations?

    With the understanding that I don’t identify as neuro-divergent, your friend might enjoy “Golden Chaos” (2014) and “The Chaos Village” (2017) by M.K. Hutchins. which I enjoyed in audio via PodCastle. “Golden Chaos” fell into a trope of “my annoying sibling’s neurodivergence that seems destined to mess up my life turns out to be exactly the superpower we need”. But “The Chaos Village” is from the point of view of the same neurodivergent character and escapes some of the othering that the first story has.

    A bit later in feel than a Tolkienesque setting, but I think the character of Micah in the SerialBox series Tremontaine is very well done.

  6. @Chip: “I don’t know whether I’m more fascinated by the suggestion that Amazon thinks it can determine whether you actually read something you’ve downloaded, or appalled that they might be able to.”

    They can’t tell whether you’ve read a Kindle book (in the sense of paying attention to the words on the page), but they advertise their ability to keep track of your current reading location across devices. Whenever your app or Kindle device connects with Amazon’s servers to sync, part of the data it transmits and receives is any change to your last-read positions in any open books. Thus, if you start a 300-page novel on your Kindle, get to page fifty, sync, pick up your iPad, and open the same book there, it’ll give you the option to skip to page fifty. Read some more on the iPad, and when you go back to your Kindle, it’ll catch up.

    Of course Amazon finds ways to monetize that data. That’s the whole Kindle Unlimited business model; authors get paid based on individual page reads from whatever books they borrow. What Amazon can’t do is track pages read on a device that never “phones home,” such as a Kindle book that gets imported to calibre, converted to EPUB, and sideloaded into iBooks.

  7. Hm, I can sort of see The Man in the Yellow Hat and Curious Geoerge being the only large living things left.

    They go on a tour of “no longer active” (but not completely defanged) missile silo. As they exit the tour, George recalls seeing something long and yellow, that might’ve been a banana. George sets off at a pace only a monkey can sustain, with The Man In the Yellow Hat quickly setting off after him.

    George finds the yellow thing, but it’s not a banana. George then slaps it over some buttons and accidentally activates a fueled rocket (looks impressive, you know, and the launch controls should have been disabled).

    OtherSuperpower’s radar systems sees an incoming missile. Unfortunately, Stanislav Petrov is no longer in active duty. Operator does NOT override automatic launch. Quick exchange of nuclera weapons ensue, TMitYH and CG get locked in the missile silo, where they survive, unlike essentially everyone else.

  8. Re: Taken with muppets

    If you want to do even a sort of straight version of the film you would need to swap the sexes. Miss Piggy as Liam Neeson’s character and Kermit as her ex-husband. The token human could be the daughter,which would save Miss Piggy from having to deal with an Ingénue muppet.

  9. @ Rev Bob. What I can’t figure out is, if you skip from page 20 to page 200 in a kindle book, does Amazon know you have skipped? Or assume you read everything in between?

  10. @bookworm1398

    Based on the description of scams in that article, Amazon don’t know you skipped. Or at least, they didn’t at one point, they may have updated to beat that scam.

  11. @Soon Lee: I know think of something like Robocalypse, Except with Bots, instead of Robots. They try to kill humanity by jacking up the prices for food and necessities.

  12. @Magewolf

    Re: Taken with muppets

    If you want to do even a sort of straight version of the film you would need to swap the sexes. Miss Piggy as Liam Neeson’s character and Kermit as her ex-husband. The token human could be the daughter,which would save Miss Piggy from having to deal with an Ingénue muppet.

    I pity those poor hijackers, if they get on the wrong side of Miss Piggy. They’ll probably go right back to kidnapping Liam Neeson’s family for the fifth time.

    @bookworm1398

    @ Rev Bob. What I can’t figure out is, if you skip from page 20 to page 200 in a kindle book, does Amazon know you have skipped? Or assume you read everything in between?

    Apparently, they can’t or at least they couldn’t. Because the way the scam works or used to work, you’ve got a huge 3000 page book with maybe one new book (may well be a novella) and than stuffed with all sorts of nonsense text. At the very beginning, there is a linkn – usually very big – asking you to click to the back for a special surprise, a message from the author, a bonus chapter, the table of contents, etc… When a reader clicks on th link – voilá – Amazon registers 3000 pages paid and the author gets 15 USD or so.

    It used to be a very lucrative scam, until Amazon cracked down on it.

  13. @Cora, bookworm:

    Yup, that was the scam. Some legit authoring guides even told you to put the TOC at the end of the book. “Novella” was frequently being generous, BTW; many authors would build up a bank of two or three dozen short stories, reshuffle ’em into several different books with each taking its turn as the headline story, and thereby cash in on all the duplicated pages.

    Come to think of it, I could name multiple current authors who are still doing that same thing. They also periodically mix it up by changing the cover art, sometimes changing the name, depublishing the old version, and posting the “new” book all over again. That way, they get to cash in aaaaaall over again – even with multiple sales, because the depublishing part breaks all of the old “you bought this on…” notices. As far as Amazon’s concerned, it’s a brand new book with a newly-minted ASIN… which just happens to have the same title and author as the work that got depublished.

    I really hate that scam. Even aside from scamming money from the KU fund and ripping off individual customers, it tarnishes the reputations of all indie authors by unwilling association. There’s no good way to say “no, really, I’m not a stuffer and I value good grammar” and be believed.

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