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#1 |
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Writer
Location: an uncharted desert isle
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Firefly as Steampunk?
We never saw Earth That Was, nor the civilization that directly left there. All we know is the aftermath. So why would said civilization set so far in the future replicate clothing, tech, customs, and speech from centuries past? Maybe because they didn't replicate anything. Say the 'verse is actually an alternate history where a Steampunk-inspired 19th century came into being and never fell, where East and West established a balance in the 1800s that continued into Firefly's present day. Some aspects of culture and tech advanced while others (six-guns, trains, horse-drawn wagons and cattle-raids) didn't. I'm not suggesting that Serenity was steampowered, although Kaylee's enginee room looked like it. I'm suggesting the opposite... what if the Old West (or an alternate version thereof) was nuclear powered? What other Jules Verne-esque variations might Earth That Was have held? EDIT... After closer thought it sounds rather silly. Please disregard.
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Visit DG's website at www.darkapostle.net Last edited by Dark Gilligan; April 3 2009 at 02:46 AM. |
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#2 |
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Commodore
Location: Toronto, Canada
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Re: Firefly as Steampunk?
Steam punk nuclear would have the steam from the nuclear reactor being pumped throughout the ship and directly running pistons that operated mechanical devices like elevators or large blast doors. Factories used to operate that way. It could be considered more efficient, you loose energy converting steam pressure into electricity, and then converting again into physical force. The efficiency makes more difference if you are operating heavy machinery like mining equipement or heavy presses, rollers, etc. Engines could just be steam further superheated into plasma exhaust. Another cool concept might be some kind of warp field FTL drive where steam powered pistons keep some kind of device spinning generating a powerful field, similar to an electro magnet. This is where the concept gets interesting, if our warp field does something to screw up electrical equipement, which is why our ship uses fully steam driven mechanical parts and manual switches. What I'm describing has nothing really to do with Firefly, but it's a fun concept to play with. |
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#3 | |
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Writer
Location: an uncharted desert isle
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Re: Firefly as Steampunk?
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Visit DG's website at www.darkapostle.net |
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#4 | |
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Agitator
Location: USA
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Re: Firefly as Steampunk?
As for the language, it was always my view that what we heard was not necessarily supposed to be how they actually spoke, but was in fact a translation for a modern audience, in the same way we see biblical stories in which everyone speaks English (often with a British accent!). Cut off from the 'mother tongue,' both physically and philosophically, they develop dialectic equivalents to the speech patterns of the Old West, whether they actually replicate them or not, so in showing them in a teleplay, using a recognizable Old West accent and slang reinforces how they 'fit' into their society. Keep in mind this is 500 years in the future; language can change a lot in that time, even on a single planet - imagine how much it can change when its spread across hundreds of worlds. If they spoke as they might if all of this were real, we might not understand them at all. I know a lot of people complain about the conceit of the Old West setting in Firefly, but when you think about the circumstances that Joss and his co-writers set up for how these people got out there and what happened once they did, IMHO it's not only a logical result, but it would be unrealistic - and bad science - to be otherwise.
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Star Trek: Reanimated - it's more than just a cartoon! |
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#5 |
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Writer
Location: an uncharted desert isle
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Re: Firefly as Steampunk?
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Visit DG's website at www.darkapostle.net Last edited by Dark Gilligan; April 3 2009 at 05:59 PM. |
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#6 |
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Vice Admiral
Location: Communist Portland
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Re: Firefly as Steampunk?
On Whedon being more interested in characters than sci-fi, as a sci-fi fan I have two words: THANK YOU! Science fiction is less about shooting stuff with lasers in the future and more about the circumstances of the world and the characters. We know through Serenity that Firefly is about a bunch of humans who went berzerk and how an "empire" overtook the galaxy removing the rights and liberty of men. That's pretty futuristic! In fact, it's the basis of Star Wars. And the characters were awesome, particularly Jayne who cracks me up. I think caring about the characters is the most important thing a writer can do.
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Thanks, HR! |
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#7 |
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Fleet Admiral
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Re: Firefly as Steampunk?
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It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion. It is by the beans of Java that thoughts acquire speed, the hands acquire shakes, the shakes become a warning. It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion. |
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