SFWRITER.COM > Novels > The Downloaded > Origins
The Origins of
Robert J. Sawyer’s
THE DOWNLOADED
In a roundabout way, The Downloaded owes its
existence to William Shatner.
Way back in 1999, I was approached by Nelvana, Canada's largest
animation studio (best known for their Droids and
Ewoks TV series set in the Star Wars
universe). They were partnering with CORE Digital Imaging on
making their first computer-animated TV series, and they wanted
me to write the pilot episode and the series bible. CORE had
done the effects for Shatner's 1994-1996 TekWar TV
series, filmed in Toronto; Bill liked CORE's work so much, he
bought the company and installed himself as CEO. He was going to
be an executive producer on the proposed collaboration with
Nelvana as well as voicing one of the characters.
I wrote the half-hour pilot script and the series bible for what
I called Exodus: Mars, Nelvana loved it, and I flew
to Los Angeles to pitch the show with Bill to various potential
buyers.
Bill had studied my material in real depth; he could answer
questions about the proposed show just as well as I could. My
favorite pitch session was the one where Bill sat down as soon as
we got into the room with the executives, swung his feet up on
the coffee table, and declared, "Okay, you've got Shatner, you've
got Sawyer, you've got Nelvana. Any questions?"
Sadly, though, Exodus: Mars didn't sell; one
potential customer told me they would have bought it if it had
been traditional cel animation, but the uncanny-valley effect of
the CGI of that era left them cold.
(By the way, I asked a Nelvana vice-president if they'd ever
worked with any of the other original Star Trek
actors. "Yes," he said, "we've worked with all of them, but Bill
is the only one we keep coming back to." I asked why and he
replied, "Because he's the only one who's always on time, never
drunk, and knows his lines.")
Even though Exodus: Mars didn't go any further, I'd
favorably impressed everyone at Nelvana. One of the founders of
that studio was Michael Hirsh, and after he sold his interest in
Nelvana (for over half a billion Canadian dollars!), he created a
new company also in Toronto called Floating Island Media. In
2015, he reached out to me with a one-line high concept for a
live-action TV show he wanted me to develop: "The science-fiction
Untouchables."
Michael's partner in this project was Fred Fuchs, the former
Executive Director of Arts and Entertainment at the
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, and Fred also
remembered me warmly for
work I'd done for him years decades before. The secret to the
success of a long writing career? Always make your engagers
happy; either they will come back to you with more work later, or
they'll recommend you to someone who will do so.
The series bible I created for Michael and Fred was one of the
best things I've ever written. It was called Dark
Cloud, the "cloud" in question being the distributed
computing cloud. The story centered around three very different
artificial intelligences vying for control of the world, with
humanity caught in the crossfire and a team of incorruptible
humans trying to bring the AIs down.
But after we pitched the show to broadcasters a few times,
Michael realized he really wasn't all that interested in live-
action TV after all; he decided to go back to solely doing
animation, his first love.
I'd always avoided doing creative projects as "work made for
hire," in which the engager, rather than the writer, owns the
copyright, but since the one-line high-concept for Dark
Cloud was Michael's, he had insisted on contracting me on
that basis, and I'd agreed. So, when he lost interest in
live-action TV, Dark Cloud was dead in the
water ... or so I thought.
Then, out of the blue, on April 26, 2019, Anna Gecan, then
the Head of Original Content for Audible Canada, called me ...
from New Jersey, where both Audible USA and Audible Canada
are based. Like Netflix before it, Audible had come to dominate
its market space simply by being a distributor of content created
by others. And, like Netflix, they'd later realized that it was
even better to be content creators, rather than just
distributors. And so, Anna wanted to know, would I like to write
an original for the fledgling Audible Canada service, building,
as she said, on my "cachet in Canada as a bestselling
science-fiction writer"?
Audible's intention was to do "old-time serialized radio
drama," and Anna envisioned me writing ten half-hour scripts for
her. She wanted a pitch, and so I gave her one: the series bible
for Dark Cloud.
The problem was that I didn't own that property; Michael
Hirsh's company did. As it happened, I'd already asked Michael
earlier that year if I could still try to sell it, and he'd said
that'd be fine, but if it did sell, he'd like to see "a little
money" come back to him, adding "we won't be difficult" and "we
won't stand in your way." And so it had seemed like a good idea
to present Dark Cloud to Anna, and she and her team
at Audible loved it.
But then I started having second thoughts. For one thing,
as much as I like him, I didn't enjoy the idea of handing over a
portion of whatever Audible might pay me to Michael. More than
that, though, the humans-versus-artificial-intelligence theme was
beginning to seem overused in pop culture. Just in the preceding
twelve months, we'd had all of these take a whack at that idea:
- the third season of Westworld (as well as its
earlier seasons)
- the second season of Star Trek: Discovery
- the second season of The Orville
- the first season of Star Trek: Picard
- and the movie Terminator: Dark Fate.
So on April 24, 2020, I said to Anna Gecan at Audible, "Do
you have a particular commitment to Dark Cloud, or
do you simply want to be in business with me?" Anna replied
absolutely 100% the latter, and so I withdrew Dark
Cloud (and have done nothing with that property since)
and told her I'd come up with something new.
This was exactly forty-six days after the World Health
Organization had declared COVID-19 to be a pandemic, though, so
Anna said we had to deal with that new reality. Because of
lockdown protocols, there was no guarantee we could get more than
one actor into a recording studio at a time, so a full radio-
drama-style presentation was out.
Also, Anna and I had been going back and forth between
having me write ten half-hour standalone episodes or writing one
continuous story to be serialized in ten half-hour chapters. At
my request, Anna agreed we'd do the latter; it's frankly easier
to write one long piece than many short ones.
All of a sudden, this project was sounding more like a novel
than a radio play: one long story, told as single-voice narration
(or, at least, only one voice per scene). I didn't yet have a
contract with Audible (among other things, my agent Chris Lotts
was trying to get them to up the fee they were offering,
something he eventually succeeded at very nicely), and so I said
to Chris that we should fully protect my rights to also sell this
intellectual property in book form.
Negotiations took another ten weeks, but we finally ended up
with a deal I was happy with: Audible would have an exclusive
six-month window to release my next novel as an audiobook, with
me retaining the film and TV rights, and, most importantly, me
having the right after that six-month window ended to publish the
novel in print and as an ebook.
Back in April, when I took Dark Cloud off the
table, I'd immediately started thinking about a new storyline for
what was now going to become my twenty-fifth novel. And that
brings us to another project that never went anywhere.
Back in 2008, Canada's national science-fiction TV channel was in
trouble (it was called Space back then but has since been
rebranded as CTV Sci-Fi). The Canadian Radio-television and
Telecommunications Commission (the CRTC) was making noises about
not renewing Space's broadcasting license.
See, Space had promised, as a condition of getting a license
in the first place, to invest in original Canadian production,
but they hadn't been doing that. And so, to appease the CRTC,
Space decided to commission a pilot script from me for a
potential hour-long Canadian dramatic science-fiction TV series.
I developed a project called Earthfall, writing a
pilot episode entitled "Vanguard" and background notes outlining
the mythology for the series. Space loved it. The storyline
centered on an alien race that had uploaded into a
virtual-reality heaven supposedly for good only to find that its
members had to download back into physical reality because their
sun had become unstable, requiring them to find a way to relocate
to another planet which was Earth. The main characters
were a male alien named Jurteg and a female one named Lorsal.
All was looking good until the worldwide financial
crisis of 2008 hit. Space went pleading to the CRTC that, given
the current situation, they simply couldn't afford to make
Canadian TV shows now (preferring to endlessly, and profitably,
rerun all the different Star Trek TV series; no
Canadian broadcaster ever wants to make anything if they
don't have to). The CRTC caved, and Earthfall was
dead.
Actually, it could have been worse than dead. Under the
Writers Guild of Canada contract, CTV (Space's parent company)
could have held onto the rights for seven years before reverting
them to me, but in an extraordinary act of generosity,
Fraser Robinson, the head then of Original Content for Space, released
all rights immediately. I did try a few times to sell
Earthfall to other broadcasters, but that
ultimately went nowhere.
And yet that notion stuck with me: beings who had uploaded
their consciousnesses suddenly being forced to download into
physical reality again.
I've often said that all science fiction is not about
whatever future year it might be putatively set in but is
actually about the year in which it was written, and, as I took
hold of that nub of an idea in 2020, I realized that, in fact, we
had all begun living uploaded lives, thanks to COVID-19: many of
us were now telecommuting to work instead of going into an actual
office; we were ordering in food instead of dining out; and Zoom
and other video-chatting services had become our way to see
friends and family we couldn't safely visit in person.
Of course, the pandemic had to end at some point, and then
we would suddenly all be forced to download again, having to deal
with actual physical people in the real world. What would that
be like? I threw out the aliens Jurteg and Lorsal from
Earthfall and decided to focus on human astronauts
Jürgen and Letitia instead. The Downloaded now had
a template ... but I wasn't quite sure how to structure the
story, especially with the restriction that we could only have
one actor per scene because of COVID.
By this point, Audible had contracted with
Gregory J. Sinclair (on the right with me in the photo taken at the
2022 Giller Awards banquet in Toronto), formerly a major player in the
Radio Drama department
at the CBC, to be the producer and director of many of their
Canadian Audible Originals. Greg was yet another person with
whom I'd worked in the past, and he remembered me as fondly as I
remembered him; I knew we'd make a great team for this
and, indeed, Greg immediately came up with the solution to the
structural issue, saying "Why not do it like
Rashomon?"
Well, I'd heard of the Akira Kurosowa film of that name
and knew that it was a series of conflicting narratives about the
same story, but I'd never seen it. I immediately ordered
a Blu-ray copy of the movie, and read (and very much enjoyed)
translations of the two short stories by Ryunosuke Akutagawa that
it's based on: "In a Grove" and "Rashomon."
I also got a DVD of the little-known 1964 American remake of
Rashomon called The Outrage, starring
Paul Newman, Edward G. Robinson, Howard da Silva, and him
again! William Shatner; I confess to enjoying
Outrage more than the Japanese original, although
it's not as technically inventive. I also rewatched the
Rashomon-esque "Not Prince Hamlet," by far the best
of the post-first-season episodes of The Paper
Chase, a law-school drama that I love in all its
incarnations (novel, film, and TV series), and the similarly
structured "A Matter of Perspective," a mediocre third-season
episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation. All of
that convinced me Greg was right (as he usually is!): the format
of multiple individual narrators each telling a part of, or a
version of, the whole story, would work wonderfully for The
Downloaded.
Other elements fell quickly into place: Waterloo, Ontario
Canada's "Quantum Valley" was the logical setting
for my advanced quantum-computing facility; I'd given a keynote
address in 2012 at the tenth-anniversary celebration of the
real-life Institute for Quantum Computing there. That institute
was founded by my friend and BlackBerry co-inventor
Mike Lazaridis, and the line from him I quote in The
Downloaded is what he really said to me years ago when
I'd asked him whether he thought it ironic that his firm, based
in Waterloo, was surrounded by folk who would never use its
products. He'd responded, "I love the Mennonites. They're the
backup plan for humanity." And they became precisely that in
The Downloaded.
From that point on, even though I hadn't started actually
writing it yet, this should have been a straightforward project,
and so Audible went ahead and publicly announced that The
Downloaded would be out in 2021.
But I got very sick in September 2020 and lost a whole year
of work dealing with that. Audible was completely supportive of
me needing a deadline extension, and, when I finished the
manuscript to everyone's satisfaction in May 2022, we assumed
we'd get the audiobook version out before the end of that year.
And then it was Greg's turn to get very sick, and so we postponed
production for several months until he was well enough for us to
proceed.
It was up to Audible to choose and hire the actors who would
do the narration, but they'd asked Greg and me for suggestions,
with one proviso that we completely agreed with: they wanted
Canadian actors; they were positioning The
Downloaded as a big project for Audible Canada (and they
also did a French-language version entitled Le voyage
immobile, which dropped the same day as the English one).
To read the part of Roscoe Koudoulian whom both Greg
and I think of as the main character Greg suggested
Brendan Fraser, and I immediately agreed that he'd be perfect.
Our hopes were dashed or so I thought on March 12,
2023, when Brendan won the Academy Award for Best Lead Actor for
his astonishing work in The Whale. But Audible,
who had been fully committed to this project from day one, said,
if that's who you want, that's who we'll get, whatever it takes.
We already had most of the other parts recorded by this point,
with a Who's Who of Canadian actors, including
Broadway performer and Dora Mavor Moore Award-winner
Vanessa Sears as Captain Letitia Garvey; Kim's Convenience
co-star Andrew Phung (a four-time winner of the Canadian Screen
Award) as the robot Penolong, and Colm Feore, a mainstay of
Canada's Stratford Festival and a winner of both the Gemini and
Canadian Screen Awards, as the mysterious Reywan, but Audible
kept pursuing Brendan, as well as their (terrific) choice of
Luke Kirby, who had won an Emmy for playing Lenny Bruce on The
Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, for the role of Dr. Jürgen Haas.
It took months of negotiation, and then there were further
delays trying to fit our recording sessions into Brendan's and
Luke's busy schedules, but finally, in July 2023, all the
narration was at last in the can.
By this time, Audible had decided that the whole story hung
together so well as a single piece, it made no sense to serialize
the content, and so what I'd written as ten episodes (the ten
chapters of the novel) were combined into one six-hour audio
drama, which turned out magnificently: a dream team of narrators,
brilliant direction by Greg, and what I think of as one of the
best things I've ever written as the story.
Audible likes to launch big titles in the fall, and so the
finished program dropped on October 26, 2023. Audible supported
the release of The Downloaded with a major TV and
radio ad campaign across Canada, which was more promotion than
any of my previous books had ever gotten (although I did love the
subway-car ads Penguin Canada had done for several of my earlier
novels).
As it happened, I was in China the day The
Downloaded debuted on Audible. The 2023 World Science
Fiction Convention ("the Worldcon") was held in Chengdu in
October 2023, and Cixin Liu and I were its guests of honor.
Following the convention, my Chinese publisher Science Fiction
World, in conjunction with the Canadian consulates in Chongqing
and Shanghai and the Canadian embassy in Beijing, sent me on a
cross-country book and cultural-event tour. I didn't get to hear
The Downloaded myself until four days after its
debut, during my long flight home from China to Canada. That
meant, as I flew from west to east, the clock was moving backward
as I listened which seemed quite appropriate, given the
time-displacement plot of The Downloaded.
That trip home was a long journey, and so was the one bringing
The Downloaded to fruition, but I thoroughly
enjoyed writing it and I sincerely hope you enjoy reading
it.
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