“10:01” by Lance Olsen and Tim Guthrie

Screen capture from"10:01" by Lance Olsen and Tim Guthrie. Black background with a picture frame that has the image of a theather with the audience getting to their seats and others sitting down. The audience are silhouttes in complete black colors.
Open “10:01” by Lance Olsen and Tim Guthrie

10:01 is a hypertext novel set in a movie theater during the ten minutes running up to the screening of the film. The text was published in 2005 in The Iowa Review Web. It consists of the image of a darkened cinema where black silhouettes sit in various rows. This image serves as one of the possible ways to navigate the text. By clicking on a figure, we read from one to five texts, each of them advancing the narrative. The text can also be navigated by using the time bar, but the reader does not feel constrained to read it chronologically. Each of the characters has its own story, which is told by an omniscient narrator that has access to their innermost feelings, hopes, fears and desires.

Even though critics like Alice Bell, Astrid Ensslin and Hans Rustad describe it as a “Web-based version of Olsen’s print Novel” (Analyzing Digital Fiction, Routledge 2014), the authors state in the credits that: “A print version of 10:01 that complements rather than reiterates this hypermedial version is available from Chiasmus Press.”

The novel is built using a combination of HTML and Flash, which allows video and sound when required by the story. The sounds represent a particularly significant contribution to this work, by setting both tone and pace. The text also presents hyperlinks (although some of them are broken) which alternatively illuminate or complicate it. The brilliancy of this work resides in the shifting tone, from harsh and critical to satirical and funny. If you would like to know how a real shrunken head ends up in a cinema in the Mall of the Americas, you should read it. You might also discover that “America… is a land of excellent pies.”

"'America' she said into the microphone, 'is a land of excellent pies."
“‘America’ she said into the microphone, ‘is a land of excellent pies.”

Featured in The Electronic Literature Collection, Volume 1.

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“10:01” por Lance Olsen y Tim Guthrie

Screen capture from"10:01" by Lance Olsen and Tim Guthrie. Black background with a picture frame that has the image of a theather with the audience getting to their seats and others sitting down. The audience are silhouttes in complete black colors.

10:01 es una novela de hipertexto ambientada en un cine durante los diez minutos previos a la proyección de la película. El texto fue publicado en 2005 en The Iowa Review Web. Consiste en la imagen de un cine oscuro donde siluetas negras se sientan en varias filas. Esta imagen sirve como una de las formas posibles de navegar por el texto. Al hacer clic en una figura, leemos de uno a cinco textos, cada uno de ellos avanza la narración. El texto también se puede navegar utilizando la barra de tiempo, pero el lector no se siente obligado a leerlo cronológicamente. Cada uno de los personajes tiene su propia historia, narrada por un narrador omnisciente que tiene acceso a sus sentimientos, esperanzas, temores y deseos más íntimos.

Aunque críticos como Alice Bell, Astrid Ensslin y Hans Rustad lo describen como una “versión web de Olsen’s print Novel” (Analizando la ficción digital, Routledge 2014), los autores afirman en los créditos que: “Una versión impresa de 10: 01 que complementa en lugar de reiterar esta versión hipermedial está disponible en Chiasmus Press.”

La novela está construida usando una combinación de HTML y Flash, que permite video y sonido cuando lo requiere la historia. Los sonidos representan una contribución particularmente significativa a este trabajo, al establecer tanto el tono como el ritmo. El texto también presenta hipervínculos (aunque algunos de ellos están rotos) que alternativamente lo iluminan o lo complican. La brillantez de este trabajo reside en el tono cambiante, de duro y crítico a satírico y divertido. Si desea saber cómo termina una cabeza encogida en un cine en el Mall of the Americas, debería leerla. También podría descubrir que “América … es una tierra de excelentes pasteles.”

"'America' she said into the microphone, 'is a land of excellent pies."
“‘America’ she said into the microphone, ‘is a land of excellent pies.”

Presentado en The Electronic Literature Collection, Volume 1.

Traducido por Reina Santiago

ELMCIP logo with text: "Read more about this work at ELMCIP."