Twenty Minutes Into the Future: Difference between revisions

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* The experimental film ''Sweet Movie'' is set in 1984 (ten years after the film's release) and much of the plot is driven by a show where the most pure woman in the world is found. It gets weirder from there.
* ''[[Real Steel]]'' is set in the year 2020. According to the film's timeline, human boxing died out around 2014, being replaced with the more violent World Robot Boxing league. Aside from that, everything looks like present day, save for a few changes (iPhones and computers look more futuristic, referees at boxing matches were denser armor, etc.).
* ''[[KuroshitsujiBlack Butler (live-actionfilm)|KuroshitsujiBlack Butler]]'', very much unlike its Victorian Era manga [[KuroshitsujiBlack Butler (manga)|source material]], er... er, [[In Name Only|inspiration]], takes place in a world where there are [[Holographic Terminal|Holographic Terminals]]s, some sort of political realignment has happened, and suitcase locks have the sort of computer technology that could have come straight from the nineties if anyone had bothered to manufacture it, low-resolution monochrome LED screens and all. Oh, and there are wind power plants on the side of a road. That's about it.
 
== Literature ==
* ''[[Snow Crash]]'' by Neal Stephenson was published in 1992, and for the timeline to work (Hiro and and Raven's fathers were WWII vets) the story would have to have occurred by sometime in the early 2000's. "The Diamond Age" seems to be set in the same universe, just a few decades after "Snow Crash".
** There are two words in ''Diamond Age'' that suggest {{spoiler|a character in common. The words? "Chiseled Spam"}}. Based on this, the events take place 50–70 years after ''Snow Crash''.
* ''[[Nineteen Eighty-Four|1984]]'' by [[George Orwell]] was allegedly titled when Orwell inverted the year of its authorship (1948). However, the early 1980s featured a great deal of hand-wringing about whether or not we'd succumbed to Orwell's [[Dystopia]]. [[Mind Screw|To be fair, Winston isn't sure that the year actually ''is'' 1984, since the records have been tampered with so often and so thoroughly]].
** ''[[League of Extraordinary Gentlemen]]: Black Dossier'' put the book's events ''in'' 1948, allowing them to {{spoiler|show a fallen Airstrip One government ten years later}}.
* Many novels and short stories by [[Philip K. Dick]] (and the film adaptations of them, such as ''[[Blade Runner]]'', ''[[Total Recall]]'', ''[[Minority Report]]'', and ''[[A Scanner Darkly]]'') are set just a decade or so in the future. [[I Want My Jetpack|He was much better at entertaining than predicting the near future.]] It's not uncommon for novels written in the 1960s and 70s that take place in the 80s and 90s to feature flying cars, androids, World Wars, [[Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking|and legalized marijuana]].
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* Joe Haldeman admits that setting his novel ''[[The Forever War]]'', about a deep space war to start in the far-off future of 1996, was silly in retrospect, and was done mainly so that the non-coms could be Vietnam veterans. He told any objectors to just "think of it as a parallel universe."
* The ''Dirk Pitt'' series of novels by Clive Cussler are usually set a year or two into the future, with the United States switching to metric and super A.I. computers with hot chick holograms.
* Any time [[Robert A. Heinlein]]'s predictions didn't happen, it was an alternate timeline. He was fair in this, too, in that there were also timelines for the worlds of [[Edgar Rice Burroughs]], [[E. E. "Doc" Smith]], and others. Interestingly, he ''did'' predict a few things accurately, like waterbeds and the rise of the Christian Right. Though perhaps the best one was ''[[Stranger in Aa Strange Land]]'', which ''predicted the 1960s counterculture''.
** Heinlein invented the waterbed as a concept. That prevented it from being patented. He makes an amusing comment about it in his brick-sized diatribe ''Expanding Universe'' from 1980.
** The themes in the book extrapolated heavily from the 1950s "[[The Beat Generation|Beat Generation]]" subculture, which was the precursor to the counterculture movements of the '60s and early '70s. Its "Church of All Worlds" was based on elements of the neo-pagan/"New Age" mystery religions which were gaining popularity among disaffected youth of the time. Heinlein himself wrote that the book "could not be published commercially until the public mores changed. I could see them changing and it turned out that I had timed it right." Many prominent figures of the counterculture would refer to ''Stranger in a Strange Land'' as a major influence on their thinking and philosophy, particularly the aspects of free love, communalism, and social liberation. Beyond merely predicting the counterculture, the book helped to create it.
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* ''[[Numbers]] 2: the Chaos'' was published in 2011 and takes place in 2026.
 
== [[Live -Action TV]] ==
* The MTV sketch comedy show ''[[The State]]'' lampooned this idea with a sketch where a man wakes up in a hospital after only a short time knocked out in an accident only to find that he missed the "most exciting 15 minutes in the history of the world", and now aliens have landed and all sorts of things have changed.
* The setting of ''[[Max Headroom]]''. You can still smoke in public buildings. It's a federal offense to turn your TV off. This being cyberpunk, [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=86-zyRlcMi4&fmt=13#t=320 there is an Internet,] though it gets called "The System", and the way it's shown to work is [[It's a Small Net After All|pretty thoroughly gonzo]]. There's no reality shows. [[Japan Takes Over the World|Japan rules the business world]]. Network news is filmed on camcorders.
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* ''[[Jonny Quest]]''. It's still set in the present day, but there is futuristic tech, like robots and personal hovercraft, and prototypes like the Parapower Ray Gun. Overlaps with [[Zeerust]] since you can tell by the dated aesthetic, but a lot of the tech featured is still in use or hasn't been made yet, such as the walkie-talkie that basically allows two-way video conferencing.
* ''[[Futurama]]'' pokes fun at this on occasion, in the fact that it takes place 1000 years later, thus the [[Couch Gag]] in the opening title claimed "YOU CAN'T PROVE IT WON'T HAPPEN!". In the first episode, Suicide Booths also had printed on them "since 2008".
* In theThe new episodes of ''[[Generator Rex]]'' has it where Rex was sent six months into the future.
** The show itself probably starts in a Twenty Minutes Into the Future setting, what with the [[Nanomachines|nanites]] and all. One episode featured a working space elevator and the flying transports used by Providence use anti-gravity to stay in the air.
 
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