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Prosthetics in fictionProsthetics often play a role in fiction, particularly science fiction. Numerous works of literature, television, and movies will feature certain characters who have had prosthetics attached. Additional recommended knowledge
Science fictionScience fiction literature, television, and movies often feature characters with prosthetics. Star Trek
Star Wars
Babylon 5
RoboCop
Other Fictionin Evil Dead the main character Ash Williams has a chainsaw hand and later receives a robot hand in Army of Darkness. In the myriad of Peter Pan stories and franchises, Captain Hook has a hook replacing his right hand which was eaten by a crocodile. In The Fugitive television series and subsequent movie, the fugitive Dr. Kimble searches for the one armed man who killed his wife - which Kimball would be mistakenly convicted of. In the movie version, the one armed man also received a transplant - who was played by Andreas Katsulas. As a result, this would be another role in addition to his Babylon 5 role in which he received a prosthetic device. During the course of the movie Forrest Gump the character of Lt. Dan Taylor would lose both of his legs due to injuries he sustained in Vietnam. Towards the end of the movie, Taylor would receive prosthetic legs, which he noted were made out of titanium. In the novel Moby Dick, as well as various productions based on the novel, Captain Ahab is a man who loses one of his legs to the great sperm whale Moby Dick. After losing his leg, a replacement of sorts is fashioned. This `wooden leg´, actually carved out of whalebone, allowed him to walk with minimal difficulty. The loss of this leg would fuel Ahab's obsession with Moby Dick, which cost him his ship, crew, and his life. Wallace Stegner's Pulitzer-prize winning novel The Angle of Repose, features an amputee protagonist. In the anime Fullmetal Alchemist, Edward Elric loses his left leg below the knee and his entire right arm and has them replaced with metal limbs called automail. In the Manga/Anime Ghost in the Shell, people who have had their bodies damaged or people who can simply afford it have their normal bodies replaced with a full prosthetic replacement. This is usually done because the user needs it for personal purposes such as work or convenience. Usually, going full prosthetic increases a person's physical strength and sometimes even their mentality, it all depends on the money. The main character, Motoko Kusanagi, is fully prosthetic with the best technology any company could offer. The television series The Six Million Dollar Man and its spinoff The Bionic Woman both featured main characters whose replacement parts gave them abilities above those of normal people. In the Harry Potter novel series, Alastor "Mad-Eye" Moody has an artificial eye (able to see through solids) and a wooden leg to compensate for wounds he received during his career as an Auror. The exact events that caused these wounds are unknown. In the first-person shooter computer game Half-Life 2, Dr. Eli Vance uses a prosthetic leg after losing his own leg below the knee helping his colleague Dr. Isaac Kleiner over a wall while escaping Black Mesa in the original "Half Life" game. In the real-time strategy computer game Rise of Nations: Rise of Legends, one of the characters - General Carlini has a prosthetic right leg after having his real one blown off in some unmentioned ordeal. The character Rotwang from the film Metropolis has a black mechanical right hand after losing it for unknown reasons. Because Rotwang is an early "mad scientist" archetype, it is believed that this influenced other characters, such as Dr. Strangelove (who possessed a prosthetic arm which was prone to seizing up) and Dr. Julius No (who, in the novel, had jointed metal claws; in the movie, however, he possessed actual artificial hands). In the Akira manga and anime Tetsuo Shima, one of the main characters, loses his right arm and has it replaced by a mechanical limb. In the anime he's seen assembling the arm from pieces of junk using his supernatural powers, while in the manga the origin of the mechanical arm is unknown. A running gag in the film Hot Shots! and its sequel is Lloyd Bridges's character, Thomas 'Tug' Bensen, featuring various prosthetics that replace parts he had lost in earlier battles. These prosthetics include; ceramic eyes, asbestos skin, a magnetic skull plate, aluminum siding facial bones, and stainless steel ear canals. |
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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Prosthetics_in_fiction". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia. |