
Hollywood has produced many great science fiction movies written for families: E.T., WALL-E, Star Wars, that sort of thing. These are movies designed to appeal to the whole family. But science fiction movies that are made specifically for younger children are few and far between. So how do you go about writing science fiction for children? Here’s more from Sci-Fi Bloggers:
WondLa is what a children’s television series should aspire to be. It’s kid-friendly but doesn’t disrespect its audience. It uses tropes but doesn’t fall into them completely. Despite having a very fleshed-out world to build, it doesn’t stop and shove exposition. At every point in the first three episodes, you are expected to pay attention to small details and look for answers to its many mysteries.
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And if that wasn’t good enough, WondLa also has a great premise—at least from what I currently know is going on. It’s a classic Rapunzel situation with a sci-fi twist. Our main character—a girl named Eva, who we see grow up until she’s 16—is isolated to a small underground chamber where she’s raised by A.I.s and told she’ll eventually get to meet with other humans. But it’s implied (though not confirmed) that the system is faulty and won’t actually let her out. She may be trained in survival, science, math, and so much more in preparation, but has no understanding of how to interact with people and doesn’t quite know to distrust anything that’s presented to her. Until—as you can obviously guess—stuff goes wrong, and she has to leave the shelter to a new world.
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