Ender's Game: Difference between revisions
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The latest author-written [[screenplay]] was finished and submitted to [[Warner Brothers]] by [[Orson Scott Card]] in May 2003. [[David Benioff]] and [[D.B. Weiss]] were later signed to write a new script, working closely with [[Wolfgang Petersen]]. However, as of December 15, 2005, all previous attempts to write a script had been dropped. Card himself has announced he will be writing a new script not based on any previous one, including his own. |
The latest author-written [[screenplay]] was finished and submitted to [[Warner Brothers]] by [[Orson Scott Card]] in May 2003. [[David Benioff]] and [[D.B. Weiss]] were later signed to write a new script, working closely with [[Wolfgang Petersen]]. However, as of December 15, 2005, all previous attempts to write a script had been dropped. Card himself has announced he will be writing a new script not based on any previous one, including his own. |
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While Ender's Game is officially in [[pre-production]], according to IMDB<ref>{{imdb title|id=0400403|title=Ender's Game}}</ref>, the movie rights to the book is still looking for a financier.<ref>[http://endersgamemovie.blogspot.com/ Ender's Game movie blog].</ref> Nothing has been released on the content of the approved script, or casting, however based on information from Orson Scott Card's previous scripts, it will be a fusion between ''Ender's Game'' and ''[[Ender's Shadow]]'', both of which take place in the Battle School, but the former from Ender's point of view, and the latter from [[Bean (Ender's Game)|Bean]]'s point of view. |
While Ender's Game is officially in [[pre-production]], according to IMDB<ref>{{imdb title|id=0400403|title=Ender's Game}}</ref>, the movie rights to the book is still looking for a financier.<ref>[http://endersgamemovie.blogspot.com/ Ender's Game movie blog].</ref> Nothing has been released on the content of the approved script, or casting, however based on information from Orson Scott Card's previous scripts, it will be a fusion between ''Ender's Game'' and ''[[Ender's Shadow]]'', both of which take place in the Battle School at the same time, but the former from Ender's point of view, and the latter from [[Bean (Ender's Game)|Bean]]'s point of view. |
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=== About the movie === |
=== About the movie === |
Revision as of 09:51, 9 January 2008
Author | Orson Scott Card |
---|---|
Cover artist | John Harris |
Language | English |
Series | Ender's Game series |
Genre | Science fiction |
Publisher | Tor Books |
Publication date | 1985 |
Publication place | United States |
Media type | Print (Hardcover & Paperback) |
Pages | 357 pp |
ISBN | ISBN 0-312-93208-1 Parameter error in {{ISBNT}}: invalid character |
Followed by | Speaker for the Dead |
Ender's Game (1985) is one of the best-known novels by Orson Scott Card.[1] Set in a future where mankind has barely survived two invasions by the "buggers", an insectoid alien race, the world's most talented children, including the extraordinary Ender Wiggin, are taken into Battle School at a very young age to supply commanders for the expected Third Invasion. The book takes place in the year 2135, and its sequels, Speaker for the Dead, Xenocide, and Children of the Mind, follow Ender to different worlds as he travels far into the future.
The book originated as the novelette "Ender's Game" published in the August 1977 issue of Analog Science Fiction and Fact.[2] Card later expanded the novel into the Ender's Game series, dealing with the long-term effects of the war.
A slightly updated version was released in 1991.
Plot summary
Mankind has made contact with an insectoid alien race known to humanity as the "Buggers," or more formally as "Formics." The buggers have attempted to invade Earth twice; having been narrowly defeated the second time by a man named Mazer Rackham, and the threat of a third bugger invasion looms large over the Earth.
Enter Andrew "Ender" Wiggin (his nickname given to him by his sister Valentine): a six-year-old boy and third child of his parents, an audacity under the population restriction laws, permitted only by special sanction by the government hoping he will be a combination of his sadistic older brother Peter and his kind hearted sister Valentine. The International Fleet (IF) is seeking the next brilliant military commander among Earth's children. Young Ender is approved by the government for training at the elite Battle School, a space station where children are trained. After a confrontation with a school bully, whom he accidentally kills, Ender chooses to accept Colonel Graff's offer to attend, leaving behind his world for the hope of the future.
Upon arrival at Battle School, Ender is immediately singled out by the administration and the other students and kept at arm's length from the camaraderie of the students. He is quickly promoted, annoying many of his commanders with his brilliance, and quickly becomes the top-ranking soldier in school. Ender finds a way around his isolation and frustration by forming his own nightly "practice" sessions with some of his younger comrads, instructing anyone who wishes to come and practice.
Ender is quickly promoted to commander of a brand new Dragon Army, and he molds his young soldiers into an unbeatable team, despite the teachers' stacking of every game against him. Some time after an especially brutal victory against one of Ender's former commanders, Bonzo Madrid, Ender is cornered by Bonzo along with several of Bonzo's soldiers. Unable to escape the situation without violence, Ender convinces Bonzo to fight him alone; Ender unknowingly kills him. Ender learns the lesson that there is no rule book in war and throws his own concepts of the game away. This clever circumventing of an impossible situation incites Ender himself to be promoted to Command School, six years earlier than anyone else in the history of the system. Most leave at sixteen, Ender leaves at nearly ten. He is taken briefly to Earth to visit his sister Valentine.
Ender is taught at Command School by Mazer Rackham, kept alive into his own future by sending him away at near lightspeed and then turning around and bringing him back at near lightspeed. Mazer instructs Ender in a game very similar to the Battle Room, only this time instead of commanding soldiers, Ender will command ships in a 3-D space battle. At this point, Ender is reunited with the closest people to him from battle school as his subordinates in this battle game. Ender commands them directly, and it is up to them to carry out his commands. Each day the games become more and more grueling, and Ender is slowly being worn down to psychosis, along with his fellow commanders. Waking and sleeping blend together as Ender loses his sanity, but he maintains his military brilliance.
Finally Mazer confronts Ender, telling him that he will face an extremely grueling final exam. The game begins, and Ender is outnumbered 1,000 to 1. When the enemy is finally in range, Ender orders the use of a special weapon against the planet itself, destroying the simulated planet and all ships in orbit. Ender consciously makes this decision knowing that it is expressly against the respectable rules of war, hoping that his teachers will find his ruthlessness unacceptable and remove him from command, and allow him to return home.
It is revealed to Ender that every battle he has been fighting against Mazer was actually a real battle taking place in bugger space. The military sent ships at the bugger planets many years ago, and outfitted them with new technology making communication possible. Ender realizes that he just ordered the actual destruction of an entire race, and the guilt of the massacre forces him into a five-day coma.
When he awakens, it's revealed to Ender that he is being heralded as the savior of the human race, and now that the bugger threat has been eliminated, mankind is expanding into the empty formic planets and repealing the population laws. Valentine arrives at command school and convinces Ender to go with her on the first ship leaving for colonization. There he discovers an unborn formic queen who through a psychic link with Ender communicates that her race were not aware humans were sentient creatures, that only their defeat during the Second Invasion forced them to realize humanity's true nature; they had resolved to never attack Earth again. He resolves to atone for his destruction of the formic race by finding a place to resurrect the queen, bringing the alien race back into existence. In addition to authoring The Hegemon at Peter's request to tell the truth of his brother's troubled life, Ender writes of the compassion and pain of the formic race and titles his book The Hive Queen, and signs it "Speaker for the Dead."
Creation and inspiration
The original novelette is merely a snapshot of Ender's experiences in Battle School and Command School; the full-length novel is a more encompassing work dealing with Ender's life before, during, and after the war, and it also contains some chapters describing the political exploits of his older siblings back on Earth. In a commentary track for the 20th Anniversary audiobook edition of the novel, Card stated that Ender's Game was written specifically to establish the character of Ender for his role of the Speaker in Speaker for the Dead, the outline for which he had written before novelizing Ender's Game.
In his 1991 introduction to the novel, Card discussed the influence of Isaac Asimov's Foundation series on the creation of the novelette and novel. Historian Bruce Catton's work on the American Civil War also influenced Card heavily. He also derived the name and basic function of the ansible from Ursula K. Le Guin's works.
Awards and impact
Ender's Game was the winner of the Hugo Award for best novel in 1986[3] and the Nebula Award for best novel in 1985,[4] two notable awards in science fiction. The following year, the sequel Speaker for the Dead also won both awards; Card is the only author to have won both awards in consecutive years.[1]
Several schools around the world have adopted Ender's Game as required reading, some for its psychological aspects, others for its science fiction background. Some examples include:
- The Marine Corps University at Quantico, as a textbook on the psychology of leadership.[1]
- The state of New South Wales, Australia, Higher School Certificate[5]
Reviews
- Review of Ender's Game
- Online Study guide for Ender's Game
- Study guide with analysis and quizzes on Ender's Game
- "Creating the Innocent Killer": An essay by John Kessel about the intention-morality of Ender's Game
- "Ender's Game and the Hero's Quest": An essay by Michael Collings concerning the "literary merit" debate of Ender's Game
- Ender's Game Quotes: Collection of memorable quotes from the novel
Film
The latest author-written screenplay was finished and submitted to Warner Brothers by Orson Scott Card in May 2003. David Benioff and D.B. Weiss were later signed to write a new script, working closely with Wolfgang Petersen. However, as of December 15, 2005, all previous attempts to write a script had been dropped. Card himself has announced he will be writing a new script not based on any previous one, including his own.
While Ender's Game is officially in pre-production, according to IMDB[6], the movie rights to the book is still looking for a financier.[7] Nothing has been released on the content of the approved script, or casting, however based on information from Orson Scott Card's previous scripts, it will be a fusion between Ender's Game and Ender's Shadow, both of which take place in the Battle School at the same time, but the former from Ender's point of view, and the latter from Bean's point of view.
About the movie
- Ender's Game at IMDb
- Fresco Pictures news page for Ender's Game
- Early Draft of Ender's Game movie script
- 'Ender's Game Movie Fan Blog'
- Taleswapper Ender's Game Movie Update
Translations
- Chinese: 安德的游戏 ("Ender's Game"),2003.
- Template:Lang-hr ("Ender's Game"), 2007.
- Template:Lang-cs ("Ender's Game").
- Template:Lang-da ("Ender's Strategy"), 1990.
- Template:Lang-nl ("Ender's Tactic").
- Template:Lang-et ("Ender's Game"), 2000.
- Template:Lang-fi ("Ender"), 1990.
- Template:Lang-fr ("Ender's Strategy"), 1996, 1999, 2000, 2001.
- Template:Lang-de ("The Big Game"), 1986, 2005.
- Template:Lang-he ("The Ender's Game").
- Template:Lang-hu ("Endgame"), 1991.
- Template:Lang-it ("Ender's Game").
- Template:Lang-ko ("Ender's Game"), 1992, 2000 (two editions).
- Template:Lang-ja ("Ender's Game"), 1987.
- Template:Lang-no ("Ender's Game"), 1999.
- Template:Lang-pl ("Ender's Game").
- Template:Lang-pt ("The exterminator's game") (Brasil).
- Template:Lang-pt ("The final game") (Portugal).
- Template:Lang-ro ("Ender's Game").
- Template:Lang-ru ("Ender's Game"), 1995, 1996, 2002, 2003 (two editions).
- Template:Lang-es ("Ender's Game").
- Template:Lang-sv ("Ender's Game"), 1991, 1998.
- Template:Lang-th ("The game that change the world"), 2007.
See also
- List of characters in the Ender's Game series
- Concepts in the Ender's Game series
- List of works by Orson Scott Card
References
- ^ a b c Ender's Game The Book. Fresco Pictures.
- ^ Short Stories by Orson Scott Card - Ender's Game. Hatrack.com.
- ^ The Hugo Awards, 1986
- ^ 1985 Nebula Winners
- ^ "Annotations of Texts Prescribed for the First Time for the Higher School Certificate: Common Content" (PDF), News South Wales Board of Studies: 3, 2001–2002
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: date format (link) - ^ Ender's Game at IMDb
- ^ Ender's Game movie blog.
External links
- About the novel Ender's Game from Card's website
- The original short story from Card's website
- Ender's Game title listing at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- Intergalactic Medicine Show: Online science fiction magazine published by Orson Scott Card. Features a new Ender's world story in every issue.