But there was/is one look at the future that was intentionally (and consistently) funny. Futurama was originally on Fox and abruptly canceled after four seasons. But like another gone-too-soon animated series (The Family Guy), Futurama gained its own cult following, spawned four direct-to-video features and now returns to the small screen on Comedy Central (Thursdays, 10 pm EST).
Created by Matt Groening (The Simpsons) and developed by Groening and longtime Simpsons writer David X. Cohen, the series follows the adventures of Phillip J. Fry, a slacker pizza delivery guy who gets frozen in 1999 and awakens 3000 years in the future. He eventually lands a job with Planetary Express, an interplanetary delivery service run by the eccentric inventor Professor Hubert J. Farnsworth, his 160-year-old great-grandnephew. He best friends are Bender, an amoral robot and Leela, a cyclopean mutant and ship’s captain.
Like its older sibling Futurama always featured a healthy dose of social commentary. (A recent episode featured “eyePhones,” “Twitcher,” the problems of e-waste and social networking and a singing boil named Susan. And it all worked.) But it was/is also full of SF references: sound effects from Star Trek (Original Series) abound (especially whenever a door opens or closes), Morbo, the belligerent newscaster, bears more than a passing resemblance to the Metaluna Mutant from This Island Earth, and genre references in dialog is frequent. Two of my favorites:
When Professor Farnsworth accidentally destroys an entire civilization living in a Petri dish, he remarks, "Boy, the Jedi are gonna feel that one!" And when Fry muses on how great it would be if there were a soft drink that was individually tailored to whoever drank it, Leela tells him there is one, Soylent Cola.
Fry: What does it taste like?
Leela: It varies from person to person.
So far, Comedy Central has ordered 26 episodes. Let’s hope they won’t be the last.
*Mel Brooks’ Star Wars—SF spoof Spaceballs doesn’t count, technically, because it was set in the past.
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