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Straczynski Adapting E.E. Doc Smith's Lensman For Ron Howard

By Josh Tyler: 2008-01-15 02:13:33
Straczynski Adapting E.E. Doc Smith's Lensman For Ron Howard As anyone who’s read this site for any length of time should know, I’m a huge fan of classic science fiction. I grew up inhaling Jules Verne, obsessing over Heinlein, and being swept away by Ray Bradbury. My dad’s classic, paperback science fiction collection was my first window into worlds of amazing imagination, and when other kids spent their summer vacations outside riding bikes I’d plop down next to his bedroom bookshelf and start pulling off careworn paperbacks. Most of them were entirely age-inappropriate (Heinlein has always been kind of a lech), so my adventures would end every day when he got home from work. I actually think he knew I was reading them, and we sort of hand this silent understanding between us that as long as I didn't get caught, we'd never tell my mom. As an adult nothing has really changed, I’m still that big of a nerd.

I’m such a nerd, that I’ve even read almost everything ever written by E.E. “Doc” Smith. Doc Smith was one of the real pioneers of the science fiction genre, author of two massive, epic series of books. His first, the “Skylark” series, was written in 1920. His second success, the “Lensman” series, was started in the late 30s. I’ve always preferred “Skylark”, but Smith always maintained that “Lensman” was his best work (he regarded it as his only real work of science fiction since he used a lot of advanced, headache-inducing, actual science concepts), and apparently Ron Howard and Babylon 5 creator J. Michael Straczynski agree.

Late last week Sci Fi Wire got the ball rolling when they reported that Universal and Ron Howard’s Imagine Entertainment are negotiating with Smith’s estate for the film rights to the “Lensman” series. That doesn’t necessarily mean they’re serious about making it into a movie, it really only means they’re thinking about it.

What does make this whole thing a little more realistic is that on his official site Straczynski has started hinting that he might be the guy adapting E.E. Doc Smith’s work into a script. When asked by a poster on his message board if Howard’s Lensman project might be related to something JMS is working on, Straczynski responded coyly, “Who can say...?” That’s sounds a lot closer to a yes than a no to me.

So two big names may be involved in this thing, one of them the most respected people in modern science fiction. You’re probably wondering what the heck this Lensman thing is all about. It’s weird. I’ve read them, but I wouldn’t call myself a fan. For my father, who was born in the 40s and grew up in the 50s, E.E. Doc’s Smith’s work was huge; but for me, even when I first read it back in the 80s it was dated. Not because the stories use out of date ideology, more because so much of what Smith did has since been copied, done, and redone by everyone who’s come after him. The parts which haven’t been copied can probably be best described as pretty weird.

The books follow a universe spanning story in which two rival groups of trans-dimensional super-beings wage a battle for supremancy. The bad guys are out to rule, the good guys attempt to help lesser races like men grow and combat them. They do that by helping create the Galactic Patrol, and giving its members something called the “Lens”. The Lens is like The Force meets Green Latern’s ring, with all kinds of crazy, surreal, inter-dimensional powers. Like I said, it gets confusing. But if JMS can distill the whole thing down to the story of a group of humans gifted with a super-powerful device and tasked with protecting the universe, well then maybe they might have something. If JMS is really the guy Howard has tapped to write this, then he’ll have his work cut out for him. They may be short little paperbacks, but the "Lensman" books are almost frighteningly complex.


RELATED: science fiction, ee doc smith, lensman, jms

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  1. Matt Says:

    Hasn't this been done by the Japanese as a Manga cartoon back in the 80/90's? Or is it about something else with the same/similar title?

  1. Travers Says:

    JMSNews is NOT his official website. And it's not his message board. JMS posts to a USENET group called rec.arts.sf.tv.babylon5.moderated (moderated by a third party, Jay Denebeim). JMSNews is a site created by a fan to accumulate JMS's USENET postings for people who don't want to constantly scan the news group.

  1. doug l Says:

    This is an interesting bit of news for me as I'm an admirer of all things "Doc" Smith, especially the influence he had over the progenitors of today's megap-budget sci-fi industry and culture.
    If you think that the Japanese manga animation of "the Lensmen" is an entertaining bit of cartoon story-telling,(simple and heroic) I couldn't agree with you more, but aside from the name and a few other peripheral details, it would be like comparing a soap box derby racer to NASA (complex in its science and engineer-like in its social sensibilities, i.e: embarrassing)
    If you liked the manga version you might enjoy the real deal. If you didn't like the manga, well...you really aren't aware of "Doc" Smith's work and legacy and you would probably enjoy the real "Doc" Smith.

  1. Dave Says:

    This is great news.

    I've been a Lensman fan for over 30 years and would love to see this movie, especially after what I consider to be the travesty of the Japanese version.

    I want to see this.

  1. Bill Says:

    I am a relative of Doc's (great grandson) and am excited to have this POSSIBLY come to the big screen. This is the third attempt at bringing one of his novels to the big screen....let's all cross our fingers and hopes this becomes a reality!!!

  1. Michael Says:

    Actually, Doc Smith also wrote the Family d'Lambert series, as well and the Skylark and Lensmen series. The d'Lamberts were a circus family from a high Gee planet who worked as undercover agents. I recall it as being that great but I'd read all these series back in the 70s so it's all a bit vague now.

    It makes me wonder how a film will go with only red headed main actors - no wonder Ron Howard wants to do it!!! :-)

  1. Bill Says:

    Actually the D'lambert series were done by Stephen Golden, with ALOT of help by my grandmother, Doc's daughter, Verna Smith Trestrail.
    Doc had "notes" on these stories, but it Verna and Stephen that brought it together.

  1. Mark Says:

    Didn't JMS accept the last Nebula award in Doc's name? I got the impression that he was one of the many young writers that the gifted Smith influenced and mentored.

  1. Link Says:

    My late Dad was a big E.E. Doc Smith fan, and he used to keep me on the edge of my seat as a kid with graphic descriptions of Smith's fiction. I started reading the Lensman books myself in my junior high years, and immediately became a fan. The Lensman fiction would make great cinema - my one regret is that my Dad didn't live to see that possibility.

  1. Richard Says:

    This would be great if it were done right.

    However, if I think of LOTR, the current incarnation of the Narnia movies (thus far),
    or the HP movies (thus far), I think that doing it right would prove very difficult.
    Books and movies are very different media, and anything longer than a
    novella, even if paced and composed in a way that would readily translate
    to the different medium, would have to be edited quite a bit to fit into
    something people would be willing to sit through (say 2 1/4 hours, tops).

    _Triplanetary_ would lend itself to considerable editing, simply by compressing
    the segments set in earlier eras (although the whole bit with the Nevians and
    Gray Rodger could use some tightening for the screen, I think). _First Lensman_...
    slow in spots, but a lot of more relevant background info there. But since one
    can scarcely count on a 6-movie series, maybe it'd be better to just cut to the
    main action and do _Galactic Patrol_ through _Children of the Lens_. But there,
    it's really one relentless progression. Maybe that's not a bad thing - some
    steps could be compressed, others elided altogether (if they had little enough of
    significance that it could be transferred elsewhere, and if considerable attention
    were paid to the continuity of the result).

    But just as LOTR, although it left one feeling they _wanted_ to do full justice to the original,
    could probably not have been commercially viable had it followed the books much
    more closely, so I suspect the same would apply to the Lensman series. Those who
    fail to allow for the limitations of a visual medium (which has to _show_ everything
    rather than describe it and leave the rest to the imagination, and where an entire episode
    must be consumed in one sitting - how many people other than me routinely read an
    entire book straight through?) may well be disappointed by even the most faithful
    rendering the marketplace can accept.

    I wonder how many younger folks would think that such a series of movies were
    inspired by _Star Wars_, when of course chronologically that's impossible, and indeed
    it almost _had_ to be very much the other way around!

    Still, if it _could_ be done, preserving all the essentials but adapting to the strengths and
    limitations of a different medium, and if it could avoid looking as if it was just a rehash of
    all that has in fact borrowed from the books, I'd want to go see...

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