Three-Body (2023) - sci-fi series based on the Hugo Award winning novel

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WGH



"Three-Body" is the new sci-fi series based on the Hugo Award winning novel "The Three-Body Problem" by Liu Cixin. The 30 episode Chinese series is subtitled and accurately follows the book, I'm going back and forth between reading the novel to watching an episode.




The story starts at the beginning of China's Cultural Revolution in the 1960's and continues into the far future, often described as a history of humanity from the point of first contact with an alien civilization all the way to the end of the universe. The series starts at around page 50 in the book, then goes back in time. It is a little confusing but go with the flow, all will explained, usually many times.

The acting is a bit stilted by US premiere series standards but on par for Chinese blockbusters like "The Wandering Earth" (the sequel is coming soon). I am about halfway through the series, it has lots of thoughtful, puzzled looks along with math and science theories, it's a thinking persons sci-fi series. I'm at episode 16 and so far no car chases, ray guns, scary aliens, explosions or anything else that is a common element in American Hollywood science fiction films.

The series does have excellent episodes during which the characters play "Three-Body," an immersive 3-D game that is integral to the story line.






Three-Body has elements of the Southern Reach Trilogy By Jeff VanderMeer (Annihilation, Authority, Acceptance). How to discover and fight a superior alien species that can't be seen except through their actions.

Read the novel and watch the series to be totally immersed in another time and place. My book review:
https://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=134848.msg1940371#msg1940371

NY Times has a review of the Chinese series:
‘Three-Body’ Review: A Chinese Series Beats Netflix to the Screen
A 30-episode adaptation of the celebrated science-fiction novel “The Three-Body Problem” is premiering simultaneously in China and on the American streamer Rakuten Viki.
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/02/03/arts/television/three-body-review.html

Watch the trailer
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qqK2oDPzfx4

"Three-Body." In Chinese with English and other subtitles
https://www.viki.com/tv/39255c-three-body
and youtube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YrLompD6e_k

Rotten Tomatoes is so behind the curve that the series is not on their website.

Another reason to read the books and watch this series is Netflix is currently making their blockbuster version due out sometime in 2023. Made with a mix of white and Asian actors, the Netflix series will probably have more car chases, ray guns, scary aliens, and explosions.

The Netflix blog has more info
https://www.netflix.com/tudum/articles/three-body-problem-first-look



 


kd4ylq

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The books were great, but I honestly thought that they would be too complex to be adapted to film. I am thrilled about this and will share the series with the family!!  :thumb:

RonN5

these books were hard enough to follow in English....I can't imagine watching 30 episodes and having to read the subtitles....

WGH

Sci-fi fan alert -

You have just enough time to read Three-Body Problem while watching the 30 episode Chinese series at the same time before Netflix releases their big budget take on March 21st. The novel and series compliment each other perfectly. In Chinese with English subtitles, much of the dialog is word-for-word from the novel. The location settings, costumes and background propaganda feels authentic to the post war period.

Reading the novel and watching the series at the same time is a total immersion experience similar to the VR machine in the series. You will never feel the same about space exploration again.

The 30 episode Chinese Three-Body series is now streaming in the US at two sites:

Amazon Prime and free at
https://www.viki.com/tv/39255c-three-body

Netflix 3 Body Problem teaser reel:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5lj99Uz1d50

WGH



All 30 episodes of the Chinese "Three-Body" is now streaming on Peacock

The upcoming Netflix 8 episode adaptation is very different than the 30 episode Tencent Chinese version. The Tencent version is an ultra-faithful, almost word-for-word adaptation that, like the novels, remains squarely focused on characters from China who grapple with an alien invasion. Netflix’s version expands the story to an international cast and takes liberties [probably a lot] to adapt the dense and physics-heavy novel for a mainstream audience.

New Peacock Three-Body trailer
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2kHjGhTw9tM&t=63s

WGH

There is still time to immerse yourself in the mind bending alien invasion novel "The Three-Body Problem" before the Netflix series starts on March 21st. A new audiobook narrated by Rosalind Chao was released on February 27, 2024.

Actress Rosalind Chao narrates a new Three-Body Problem audio book. In the new Netflix series Ms Chao plays Ye Wenjie, an astrophysicist who has a pivotal role in the story. In 1971, during the Chinese Cultural Revolution, her fateful decision at the secret Red Coast Base echoes across space and time to the present day, forcing everyone to face humanity's greatest threat.



The Three-Body Problem: The Three-Body Problem Series, Book 1 Audible Audiobook – Unabridged
Cixin Liu (Author), Ken Liu - translator (Author), Rosalind Chao (Narrator), Macmillan Audio (Publisher)



The Three-Body Problem audiobook read by Luke Daniels published in 2014 is also still available


Letitroll98

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I tried watching the Chinese series and couldn't get the subtitles to appear.  I'm sure I'm just not setting the preferences correctly, but I can't figure out how to fix it so I just gave up and I'll wait for the Netflix version.  I don't much like reading subtitles anyway.

I'm sure most of the smart people here know what the real three body problem in Astrophysics is.

WGH

I tried watching the Chinese series and couldn't get the subtitles to appear.  I'm sure I'm just not setting the preferences correctly, but I can't figure out how to fix it so I just gave up...

I have seen that happen on a couple different TVs friends own and there is no solution. The decoding software in most TVs is the simplest the manufacturer can get by with, couple that with an incomprehensible user interface and the result is a frustrating experience.

My 60" Panasonic plasma is really dumb so all video is streamed via HDMI from my computer and I have had zero problems. I can copy the exact same video I watched to a thumb drive, give it to a friend and something strange like you experienced happens.

My brother is a slow reader and has trouble with subtitles. I recommended 2017 film Okja (now on Netflix) starring Tilda Swinton, Jake Gyllenhaal and Paul Dano but he didn't understand it and stopped watching because parts of the film has subtitles. I never noticed Okja has subtitles.