"James E. Gunn - Crisis" - читать интересную книгу автора (Gunn James E)

in which I described my idea for a television program in which a man from the future is sent back to deal
with problems of our times that are going to turn the future into an unlivable hell. But each time the man
from the future intervenes to solve a problem, or, more accurately, help others solve the problem, he
forgets who he is and what he has done. He has to leave messages for himself. And I outlined the plot of
"Child of the Sun."

The CBS executives seemed to like the idea, but I never heard any more from them about it. After a
couple of months I decided that since I had done all the work of planning the episode, I might as well turn
it into a story. I wrote "Child of the Sun," andAnalog published it in March of 1977. The following year it
was reprinted in Donald A. Wollheim'sThe 1978 Annual World's Best SF and I got a letter from a
production company at Universal Studios asking if the television and motion-picture rights were available.
The production company bought a year's option. I exchanged several letters with the producer about
developing the idea into a possible television series, including outlining some twenty other pressing
problems that could be turned into series episodes.

As it happened, the production company at Universal was disbanded before the year was over, and the
option was allowed to lapse. Several years later, after I had written and published half a dozen other
books, I decided to return to the situation behind "Child of the Sun," with the thought that its television
potential might have been handicapped by the inability of producers to believe that other dramatic
episodes were possible. I turned to the crisis mentioned in the note read by Bill Johnson in "Child of the
Sun"тАФ"You have just saved the world from World War III, and you don't remember.тАж" Now, it was
easy enough to write that kind of one-sentence statement for "Child of the Sun," but I didn't have the least
idea how to save the world from World War III. One of the principles of writing I have learned,
however, is that the most difficlt problems make the best stories. So I wrote "End of the World," saved
the world from World War III, and it was published inAnalog.

I followed that up in fairly short order with "Man of the Hour," "Touch of the Match," "Woman of the
Year," and "Will of the Wisp," all of them published inAnalog. Along the way I set myself other
problems. One of the first, as early as "Child of the Sun," was to write everything as if it had been filmed
by a camera: nothing was to be subjective. That way, I thought, potential producers could not fail to
perceive its cinematic qualities, and, in any case, doing it this way represented a technical challenge. I also
included a dramatic opening situation, that in televisin terminology is called a "teaser," and an identifying
series scene for each story. In this book those became "Prelude: Man in the Cage."

The second challenge I posed to myself was a minor one, to make all the titles match; all the titles have
the same pattern- "blank of the blank"- and that took some thought, particularly for the last one:
challenges get increasingly difficult as they stack up. Then I looked at Bill Johnson's predicament and
asked myself why he believes those messages he finds, and in one episode he questions the messages
and his own sanity, and decides to seek psychological help and get cured.

I also took up what I considered to be the major problems facing humanity today. Nothing easy. After
world war came the energy shortage, political leadership, terrorism, over-population, and pollution. I had
to come up with reasonable solutions for all of these, not that Bill Johnson could solve by himself but that
he could persuade others to solve because it was in their best interests, and the interests of all humanity,
to address. I had mentioned to CBS when we discussed a possible series that there had been too many
television shows in which the world had been saved for the rest of us by heroes like the
Six-Million-Dollar Man or James Bond or Superman; what I wanted to create was a series in which
there were no heroes, just someone so obscure he bears the most common two names in many telephone
books, who would act as a catalyst to initiate reactions and show others (including readers and, I hoped,
viewers) that it was everybody's responsibility to do what was right for humanity and a livable future.