It takes a Jacobin Mag to argue that a biopic about Neil Armstrong is science fiction. Or go on a tear about the meaninglessness of "autur-driven works set in space" and skip the fuck over Arrival. Look- science fiction has never been about alien species, not even vaguely. It's been about aboriginals. Star Trek puts headgear on humans and gives them entirely human emotions; the Hugo- and Nebula-winning shit out there puts headgear on human civilization and takes it all back to colonialism every.single.time. What's stupid is this is a think-piece about brooding, lonely sci fi that doesn't so much as name-check Solaris, one of the few books that actually deals with an alien so alien that we can't find common ground. And let's be honest. If you open with a title card saying "It is the near future, 'a time of hope and conflict,'" your critique isn't philosophy, your critique is sci fi.Ad Astra may be among the first films to explicitly place Clarke’s lonely cosmos possibility at its heart, but a raft of hard sci-fi films in the last few years, auteur-driven works set in space such as Duncan Jones’s Moon, Alfonso Cuarón’s Gravity, Christopher Nolan’s Interstellar, Ridley Scott’s The Martian, and Damien Chazelle’s First Man,