RD audiobooks

(Here I come wearing out my welcome once again. Ah, well ...)

I bring up the audiobooks for Red Dwarf because that's sort of what got me back into this show, and into this fandom. My sister gave me her old Zune and on it she had bought and loaded "Infinity Welcomes Careful Drivers." At first I just listened to it during long drives because it passed the time and I remembered liking the show and the books; it was, of course, entertaining, and I completely ignored who was reading it until my sister mentioned it to me near the end of my first listening. ("Wow, Rimmer does voices?")

So I've listened to it a few times. She also managed to secure the other three books for me to upload to the Zune to listen to (although I think "Better Than Life" is abridged; it's the radio show Chris read, with all the sound effects done for him instead of him having to simulate his own vomit and disco music, LOL). I just finished BTL and have a couple of observations (if they've been made before here, forgive me; as I said, I'm a clueless n00b).

Right, then. If you haven't read or heard it, "Better Than Life" picks up with the guys all stuck in the video game from the end of "Infinity," all living their fantasies: The Cat is king of half-naked valkyries on an island, Kryten is his housekeeper and dishwasher, Lister is married to Kris in Bedford Falls, with twin sons and where every day is Christmas Eve, and Rimmer is the richest and most powerful man in the world. As on the show when BTL is introduced, however, Rimmer's brain eventually turns everything to shit for them all - which is actually fortunate, since it turns out they've been stuck in the game for a hella long time and NEED to want to escape.

Without going into great details, I'll just pretend people have actually listened to it (or read the book, at least), since that's easy and I'm lazy. IMO at least, BTL is like the saddest piece of unrequited slash romance you will ever listen to being professionally read. IMO, it is painfully clear that Rimmer has a thing for Lister a mile wide and ten miles long, almost on the scale of Lister's dream of finding Kochanski. Here's the bits I noticed:

1. Rimmer divorces his first wife in BTL, a sexy Brazilian model, because she's highstrung and adultering. She comes back in this one a changed woman - literally, having had a personality transplant. She has a sense of humor, has had some of her selfishness removed, and no longer cares about money - and he is hooked. (Who might that sound like a female version of? *G*)

2. When he crashes into Lister's town in the lorry, he actually apologizes and seems to feel bad for ruining his perfect life. (Which, for Rimmer is GAH.)

3. After Rimmer is forced to leave Starbug because Red Dwarf can't sustain his hologram on board there, and Lister crash-lands on an ice planet, Rimmer spends his time harassing Holly and the others to find a way for them to go rescue Lister, who he keeps pointing out is starving on that planet and waiting for them. I mean HARASSING. He brings it up constantly, even worrying while they're being sucked into a black hole.

4. When they slingshot out of the black hole and are safe again, Rimmer and the Cat go down to the ice planet and track down Lister - who has been there for 34 years because of time distortions, being a farmer, and is an old man. Rimmer just seems so happy to have found him, and crestfallen when he realizes how long it's been for Lister to be alone with the cockroaches. (He also refrains from saying anything contradictory when Lister goes on yet again about how he intends to find Kochanski, and notices the memorials he's put up to her: a photo the wall of his house, and a field planted in jasmine with the initials K.K. For Rimmer to shut up about something like this MUST be love.)

5. After Lister dies and they give him a space burial, there's a little line where Rimmer sadly murmurs "goodbye" to the coffin and then has to go inform Holly of Lister's death. Shortly after, Holly begins printing out instructions for how to revive Lister by going through the black hole and burying him on the Backwards planet and then picking him up 36 years later - this to me is the best part of the audiobook, because the description of how damn HAPPY the solution makes Rimmer, how it makes him laugh out of joy for the first time in forever, is quite sweet.

Yeah, I'm a girl. I can't help it. The entire BTL audiobook just has this great undercurrent of Rimmer's love of Lister, whether you choose to see it as slashy or brotherly.

Any of you who've listened to the audiobook/read the book - your thoughts on the Rimmer/Lister dynamic (present or just alluded to one-sided)? What about the other audiobooks?

[identity profile] slinkhard.livejournal.com 2010-04-15 08:37 am (UTC)(link)
Too, maybe Dad knows all this and that's why HE dislikes him - there's a feeling of "you mean the three dynamos aren't mine, but THIS one IS?"

Oh yeah. And if there's self-loathing 'inherited' from anyone, it'd be Dad - he's the one who didn't make the Space Corps, yeah?

Backwards is such a weird book. It really makes you wonder what each writer brought to the show.
One of the things that stuck out for me is that in the show, I always assumed part of what Ace learnt to 'fight back' against was the whole parental expectations thing (I don't know why I assumed this, when really, he's doing exactly what his older brother did - test pilot. I guess because in his reality, his mum arguing with his teacher for him didn't work, so it would seem like he'd have to stand on his own) but in the book, he does seem to have a healthier relationship with them.
It's sort of sad in a way. There's this sense you have to earn love, and he succeeds, but he's almost playing his parent's game more than Normal!Rimmer, who at least has made some small attempt/s at breaking away from that.

Like, Lister as Spanners succeeds, but it doesn't really feel like he earnt it independently - I think it's noted how he had a different bunk-mate who got him and KK back together and helped him study; and how he enrolled in his exams so he could win back Kochanski.
It's almost like to be loved and have success professionally, they have to basically give themselves over to other people's wills.
(Same as in the S7 alternative crew, where Hologram!Lister seems to have basically totally taken on Kochanski's interests and personality.)

Whereas The Last Human has its faults, but you get the sense the characters are appreciating each other as they are.

I hope his time with Lister lands some sort of effect, that he realizes there are different definitions of failure and success.

Totally. Again on the book thing, there was some line in the Me2 part where the new Rimmer says how Lister's already changed Old!Rimmer, how he would have never even apologised when he was alive.
(I also loved the dvd deleted scenes from that ep in S1, where Lister's trying to get the Cat to live with him; really shows how he hates to be alone as much as Rimmer, and how he does rely on the interactions they have.)
And I think he definitely learns to appreciate the more important things from that example - like that episode where he's saying Lister has all this faults, but people like him. He understands why they do, he does himself although grudgingly, even if he can't/won't be that way himself.

[identity profile] slinkhard.livejournal.com 2010-04-15 08:05 pm (UTC)(link)
LOL, I love meta. I'm not much a writer, and I can't make icons to save my life, but I never get sick of discussing stuff.

So yeah - he has an Ace somewhere down there inside him.

For sure, and vice versa - I like how Ace, while overcoming a lot of Rimmer's hang-ups that hold him back, isn't necessarily perfect - he meets them screwing up in Dimension Jump. He just deals with mistakes by going 'How can I fix this?' where Rimmer obsesses and apportions blame, which just draws more attention.

I sort of thought "maybe Rimmer thinks Lister is an adult who should be managing his own life if he wants something badly enough," LOL.

ROFL, well, really! I think there's some funny line (well, I presume it's meant to be cheesy and funny, since it was) where this guy's sat down KK and Lister and explained to them about relationships and how passion burns out.
Like, jesus, have fun rearing two grown adults and handholding them into raising a family, there.
If the only thing between them breaking up forever and being blissfully married is that they need this random dude to tell them what to do at every step, maybe they just weren't that suited in the first place.
(I always liked the early canon of Kochanski and Lister never having dated, anyway. It's more romantic to have this lost opportunity than 'They had sex a bunch, then she dumped him for her ex.')

I love that scene; it's one of the few times you see Rimmer actively appreciating anything about Lister, and Lister being nice to him.

Yeah, it's one of my favourite episodes of that season (second only to Parallel Universe), really sweet.
I like ones where you can see where both characters are coming from in a conflict (heh, although also there's quite a few episodes where one in particular is screwing up, and you're cringing to watch them - Rimmer in 'Rimmerworld' when he's sneaking away, or Lister in 'Marooned' when he saves his guitar) and that one's really well put together.
I love how Lister gets this new view on his own memory (like how he puts it - Rimmer saw her in a way that Lister never really did, and how Rimmer's instantly recognises he 'treated her really badly' where Lister made excuses at first), whereas Rimmer sees where Lister's coming from for once, too.