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Wreck Tech is the key to the very identity of SFM. Speculative fiction has wised up since the wild-eyed optimism of its visionary early days, and SFM reflects the downbeat sensibility of today. Even though sci-fi fans can hardly wait for the next tech breakthroughs, some of which will be on view in SFM's "Not So Weird Science" exhibit, they know that the future will be rough and tumble, not happy and shiny. Despite some forward-looking, hopeful exhibits, like "SETI Fiction and Fact," which will explore the Paul Allen–funded effort to receive communications from actual ETs, SFM will essentially be, like any museum, retrospective. It will celebrate a past when geniuses could envision happier futures and it will chronicle sci-fi's evolution into negativity, including the bleakness expressed in Planet of the Apes (the costume of Dr. Zaius will be on display). There also will be vistas of cities of tomorrow, as envisioned by The Jetsons, Blade Runner, and The Matrix. What's fun about The Jetsons is how ridiculously unlikely their leisurely life is; the latter two flicks capture the modern sci-fi mind-set—awed by gizmos and cool ideas, but hip to the grim facts of future life. Today, we dance to a post-apocalypso beat: Tech does not improve human nature.
Thus SFM's essential thrust is the opposite of the last big science-fiction extravaganza in these parts, the 1962 World's Fair, which was all about the shiny, perfect techno-future that was supposed to have come true by now. The "World of Tomorrow" exhibit at Seattle's Century 21 Exposition, writes University of Washington historian John Findlay in his definitive book Magic Lands, "left little room for pessimism. To Americans in 1962, the future promised to be orderly, efficient, and prosperous, as well as humane and enlightened and automated." The most popular exhibit was the hopeful Hall of Science, which attracted twice as many people as the Space Needle. In the "World of Tomorrow" exhibit, folks got a glimpse of what technology would do: make workers so productive that their bosses would institute a 24-hour work week. News flash from Century 21: Increasing tech efficiency means you're out of a job or a soul-drained slave to PowerPoint.
Sci-fi writers are no longer starry-eyed dreamers. "There's a very strong barrenness that permeates recent depictions of the future," says Jules Verne scholar Judith Adams. "Now technology [is] a killing thing. The way we use technology in our culture is as a way to destroy your peers, so you can be more successful yourself." Aliens is about capitalists willing to feed humanity to monsters in pursuit of greed; the spaceship Nostromo is named after a Conrad novel about greedy self-destruction.