RockDoctor wrote: ↑Thu Mar 21, 2024 12:10 am
Those clues don't help me. But the initialisms remind me of, I think, Harlan Ellison's "I have no Mouth, But I must Scream!", where the computer controlling the "cyberverse" in which the humans are struggling is using them as toys for it's own entertainment.
Is that close enough to qualify? Wrong direction for the normal contributions, but hey - why should all the stories be written from a human PoV.
OK, that's a reasonable argument - let's go with it. It gets the chalice out of my hands, which is the object of the exercise. That's answer no. 5, you are the winner, for want of a better term. Over to you.
About the clues
B (1968 film) -
Barbarella, where the heroine's welcome to an alien world was an attack by very creepy dolls.
WG (1959 story) -
War Games, by Philip K Dick. Aliens want to sell Earth-children toys. The one that everyone is watching is a toy soldier thing that eventually gets very dangerous, meanwhile their REAL weapon (a game like Monopoly but designed to teach kids to give their money away) gets through unnoticed.
IADWTS (1965 story) - I Always Do What Teddy Says by Harry Harrison - a kid is brainwashed by a mind-controlling teddy bear
SLASL (1969 story, filmed under another title 2001) -
Super-Toys Last All Summer Long, by Brian W. Aldiss, filmed as AI. Robot children used as a substitute in a world where childbirth is almost unknown.
WPS (1943 onwards - fictional character) - Winslow P. Schott - the first
Toyman in Superman comics etc.