It’s
interesting that The Empire Strikes Back
is considered by most to be the best Star
Wars film of them all. Is it the
love-triangle between Leia, Luke, and Han Solo?
Luke’s time with Yoda? The
emergence of Boba Fett? Or is it that
the Empire wins in the end? Regardless,
what can’t hurt are the sensawunda set pieces.
The asteroid hideout with a surprise, the battle over the ice plains of
Hoth, training in the jungles of Dagobah, the requisite time aboard star
destroyers, and of course, the stunning scenes in the climactic sequence at Cloud City. Following in the footsteps of George Lucas’
mode of sci-fi, and seeming particularly entranced with idea of Cloud City,
Geoffrey Landis’ 2010 novella The Sultan
of the Clouds is mini-space opera of wholly retro proportion.
The Sultan of the Clouds is the story of
David Tinkerman. A technician living on
Mars, he is asked to go to Venus with the lovely and intelligent Dr Leah
Hamakawa. Invited by the planet’s
magnate, the 12 year old Carlos Fernando Nordwald-Gruenbaum, Tinkerman doesn’t
know what to make of the invitation but accompanies the woman he secretly
loves, anyway. Arriving at the ruler’s
lavish domain in the cloud cities of Venus, things quickly turn
mysterious. For reasons Tinkerman cannot
comprehend, Norwald-Gruenbaum seems sets on courting and marrying Dr. Hamakawa
regardless of the age difference.
Tinkerman’s presence extraneous as the magnate pours traditional
Venutian gifts on the Doctor, he has plenty of time to explore the magnificent
floating globes and transport systems, and in the process gets himself into
more trouble than he imagined. The
beautiful yet toxic atmosphere of Venus threatening, it’s only a matter of time
before he comes to the bottom of Norwald-Gruenbaum’s ambitions.
The Sultan of the Clouds is full-on
retro sci-fi. Landis obviously steeped
in the writings of yesteryear genre, Heinlein (the unusual marriage structure)
and Clarke (the squeaky clean space life, not to mention the pedal-power
gas-flyers) have as much influence on the novella as the planetary adventures
of E.E. Doc Smith, Edgar Rice Burroughs, and Jack Vance do on the
plotting. If mystery and fun in the
high-flying atmosphere of another world is what you’re looking for, Landis
offers it up in tried-and-true yet quality form.
And
indeed the imagination invested in the set pieces is the strongest point of the
novella. Landis taking his time
describing Tinkerman’s surroundings, coming to sparkling life are the
infrastructure, industry, and civilization of Venus—all framed by:
“The
surface of Venus is a place of crushing pressure and hellish temperature. Rise
above it, though, and the pressure eases, the temperature cools. Fifty
kilometers above the surface, at the base of the clouds, the temperature is
tropical, and the pressure the same as Earth normal. Twenty kilometers above
that, the air is thin and polar cold.
Drifting
between these two levels are the ten thousand floating cities of Venus.”
The
ensuing story filled with swirling gases, dirigibles, mountains of cloud upon
cloud, crystal living spaces, and massive transparent globes, The Sultan of the Clouds is a visual
feast.
Problems
with the novella all stem from mode.
Looking back rather than forward, the story is pulp eye-candy with
little else to offer. Damsels in
distress, planetary takeover schemes, connivers behind the ‘throne’, and highly
conventional plotting characterize elements beyond the vivid scene
setting. About the only positive thing
that can be mentioned thematically is the parallel drawn between questing for
money and power and the mind of a twelve year old boy. Otherwise, the treatment of women, the effort
needed to suspend disbelief (the climax is particularly demanding given the
context provided), and overall comic book feel do not empower the novella
beyond entertainment.
In
the end, The Sultan of the Clouds is
a throwback story packed with visuals of the Silver Age and storyline of the
Golden Age of science fiction. Landis
descriptive, it is a classic story that hearkens back to the age of Modernism,
all set in a vividly realized setting.
Holding zero relevancy to the current state of sci-fi and social
concerns beyond, the plot cleaves to pulp without asking for forgiveness, but
just squeaks past being wholly bland given the quality of the visuals.
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