The novel, The War of the Worlds, written in
1898 has been in print from first publication until today without
interruption. H. G. Wells, author of such other novels as The Invisible
Man and The Time Machine, presents a story about a war where an alien
race of beings from the planet Mars turns their eyes towards Earth, a
planet filled with resources and natural beauty, still untainted by
pollution and toxins. Writing in journal format, Wells turns a simple
science fiction story into a fearful prophecy of total war where
civilians would become targets while burnt earth strategies would become
the norm. Man’s dependence upon technology and communication would be
nullified and humanity’s dominance of the world they live in would be no
more.
The tale is a foretelling of things to come
that peculiarly showed how an alien invasion was a figurative metaphor
of how man’s inhumanity upon man would make the 20th century one of the
most destructive in world history. With the world’s dependence on
technology for a more pampered life, it also would bring with it dangers
that were only forewarned in 1898. And the irony of the story is that
what would stop the Martians would be bacteria, Earth’s smallest and
tiniest organisms.
Dark Discussions, in this first part of a
three part arc, discuss the novel, its importance to genre fiction, and
the writer who came up with a story which at the time was an
astoundingly original idea. Further discussion includes the first great
interpretation of the story by Orson Welles’s Mercury Theater, a radio
theater presentation that brought about a panic to those who listened
thinking it to be an actual news bulletin. Orson Welles shows how in
1938 he would become one of the greatest actor/director’s in history
while bringing his cohorts at the Mercury Theater (including composer
Bernard Herrmann) to the attention of the world.
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