Pirate Cinema

English language

Published Jan. 1, 2013

ISBN:
978-1-78116-746-5
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3 stars (3 reviews)

Pirate Cinema is a novel by Cory Doctorow. It was released in October 2012. The novel is licensed under the terms of Creative Commons BY-NC-ND license and is available free on the author's website. The novel is set in a dystopian near-future Britain where the government is effectively controlled by media corporations. The main character, Trent McCauley, has had his internet access cut for reassembling downloaded films on his computer and, living rough on the streets of London, is trying to fight the introduction of a new draconian copyright law. Pirate Cinema won the 2013 Prometheus Award.The US hardcover is 384 pages long.This book was also featured as an e-book in the Humble eBook Bundle. The bundle raised more than $1.2 million, with customers paying an average amount of $14.29 for the bundle.

2 editions

Review of 'Pirate Cinema' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

before this book, i loved Cory Doctorow - his work, what he stands for, how he conducts himself in the blogging and business world...
but this is trite. the writing comes off as childish, even moronic. is this because the book's voice is a teenager? the overuse of superlatives (epic, genius, magisterial) drove me crazy. that, and the squeezing in of British slang. it was over the top.
and the plot was a little too perfect. an easy and comfy squat? skips full of delicacies? a buddy with an endless supply of electronics when you need him
emotions are conveyed through a character taking a breath, or swallowing numerous times. never deeper than that. in fact everything is surface -characters as well as scenes. the women around him are labelled as 'brilliant' without back-up plot points. 'epic' feeds from the skip materialize without the use of butter and spices (things …

Review of 'Pirate Cinema' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

This was an inspired novel. The idea of the UK with a Great Firewall of such scope and power is very scary indeed, and I liked Trent, for all his bad points.

The sixth chapter really hit home (it's not just me who goes home and feels small, after all), and the whole ethos of the story just truly rocks.

The ending was a bit of a rush, giving the story a summer holiday, now it's over and back to it kind of a feel. But I can't complain because while it hit, what a hit.

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4 stars