One Big Question About The OASIS We Wish Ready Player One Answered

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One Big Question About The OASIS We Wish Ready Player One Answered

Warning! Spoilers to follow for Ready Player One. Come back later if you haven't seen it yet.

Steven Spielberg is an unimpeachable legend of the science-fiction genre. The sheer awesomeness of Jurassic Park alone would make him a candidate for this stature, but then the man also has Close Encounters of The Third Kind, E.T. The Extra Terrestrial and Minority Report on his filmography. The man clearly knows how to weave a story with a futuristic/technological bent... but watching Ready Player One it's hard not to notice that he fails to do one thing that is really crucial to this kind of storytelling: he never actually gives audience a larger sense of the world in which the central narrative is taking place, or any idea of what normal life is like.

It should be recognized up-front that Ready Player One carries a whole ton of exposition in its first act -- so much so that it requires forced voiceover narration from Tye Sheridan's Wade Watts. There is a lot to quickly get across so that the audience can understand what's going on, from the history of James Halliday (Mark Rylance) and the OASIS, to the Easter egg hunt that has been in effect ever since Halliday's death. But when it comes to how all of this makes the movie's world different than our own, it falls short. Sure, Columbus, Ohio has become a hotspot in America, and that people of all ages are obsessed with the game, but the film lacks important context that is needed to give the story meaning and the protagonist depth.

Surprisingly, this issue could be identified as a problem born in the complications of adaptation, because all of these missing details are very much present in Ernest Cline's novel. While the movie version of Wade Watts is almost exclusively depicted as a "Gunter," using every waking moment searching for Halliday's three keys, the Ready Player One book offers much more to his everyday life. Instead of just having Sorrento casually mention that schools could be made to look like those in John Hughes movies, Wade actually attends classes; and he deals with personal complications like being so broke he can't actually travel off-world and explore the game like everyone else. Those elements are completely missing in the film, and they are problematic omissions.

The principal problem that emerges from the lack of world building is the fact that the setting of the Ready Player One movie feels entirely ordinary, and by extension doesn't really give the OASIS any kind of apparent significance. Sure, we're told that people go to school and work inside of the program, but it's the classic issue of telling instead of showing. With so much emphasis on Gunter activity and Planet Doom, there's very little in the movie that suggests it's the society-changing technology that it's supposed to be. Really, it just comes across as outrageously popular video game, which isn't really the point.

Not only is the OASIS diminished by the lacking background in Ready Player One, but Wade Watts is also severely undercut as a protagonist. As alluded to, the book paints the character as being incredibly poor, but able to succeed in the great Easter egg hunt because of his ingenuity and knowledge. The benefit of knowing who Wade is outside of the game gives us a reason to cheer him on as he's playing it. The movie basically removes half of this equation, though, and while you can still cheer on Wade because he clearly knows his stuff, his journey simply isn't as compelling because of the deleted conflict, and there's a degree of satisfaction removed from what he's ultimately able to accomplish.

Ready Player One is a fun big screen adventure with a lot of eye-popping imagery, but it also leaves a lot to be desired in its creation of its world. For a movie that's supposed to be all about the special creation of a vast virtual universe, it's surprisingly narrow in its focus, and while asking what society is like beyond the Easter egg hunt seems like a simple question for a blockbuster with its scope, it's one that is unfortunately left unanswered.





Ready Player One is a fun big screen adventure with a lot of eye-popping imagery, but it also leaves a lot to be desired in its creation of its world. For a movie that's supposed to be all about
One Big Question About The OASIS We Wish Ready Player One



While Ready Player One certainly makes good on the idea that the OASIS lets people do almost anything they want, the sense of excitement and wonder is muted by the way the OASIS looks. Ready
All Your Ready Player One Questions, Answered - Title Magazine



Ready Player One Questions and Answers - Discover the eNotes.com community of teachers, mentors and students just like you that can answer any question you might have on Ready Player One
OASIS (Ready Player One) - Quora



The next point I want to raise, which to some is an obvious one is the licensing issues that an OASIS-style world would create. Within Ready Player One, another one of the big draws of OASIS is
Ready Player One Best Quotes - 'The Oasis. It's the only



Answered Nov 1, 2018 · Author has 129 answers and 64.3k answer views There's multiple problems to overcome to get something like Oasis. The actual software side is not a problem even now - given very large funding.
Is Ready Player One's OASIS even possible? - Kitatus - Medium



1. ↑ Before we start, I should probably note that I only made it through the first 40 pages of the book before getting bored, so I will not be able to answer questions like "How does it compare to the book?" But I was born in the '80s and grew up on all the pop culture that Ready Player One is so obsessed wit
Ready Player One Questions and Answers - eNotes.com



In Ready Player One by Ernest Cline, Wade, known as Parzival in the OASIS, must solve a series of games and puzzles in an attempt to collect three keys. To obtain the jade key, which is the second



Ready Player One … going into the movie this gamer was ready. Having read the book a number of times, I had high expectations going in, but being a movie buff, I am well aware that books are different from scripts, things portrayed in books often cannot be done on screen due to time or character rights or the concept being dated for the time.
Ready Player One Questions - Shmoop



Did Ready Player One make you care more about the eighties? Less? About the same? Ready Player One shows a dystopian future. Do you see any parts of the book as coming true? What will Wade do with Halliday's fortune? What would you do with that kind of money and power? Do you think Wade will ever push the big red button that will delete OASIS?
Ready Player One Questions and Answers - eNotes.com


One Big Question About The OASIS We Wish Ready Player One



Ready Player One is a fun big screen adventure with a lot of eye-popping imagery, but it also leaves a lot to be desired in its creation of its world. For a movie that's supposed to be all about the special creation of a vast virtual universe, it's surprisingly narrow in its focus, and while asking what society is like beyond the Easter egg
'Ready Player One': Is the OASIS Actually a Place You'd Want

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