The way I look at it, given the original authors' close involvement on the show, I tend to see it less of an adaptation and more of a subsequent draft. It's the same story, with largely the same characters, plot beats and key scenes, only it's tighter, leaner and meaner. There's not a single ounce of narrative fat on this show!
I have not read the books. But I concur. The show is F'ing awesome!The Expanse is one of the few examples I can think of where the show is literally better than the books. The show does a much better job with villains for example, who are much more of the mustache-twirl variety in the novels.
That said, between Bobbie and Alex, and Amos and Peaches (I've completely forgotten her actual name) literally wrecking faces, there was a fair amount of action for a "quiet episode".
That scene was oddly mounted.The actual attack scene between Peaches and the other guy took me out of the episode a little bit. It was so weird and out of the blue.
Could be worse, he could call her "Toast".^Clarissa Mao, alias Melba Koh, hence the nickname, for Peach Melba, an ice-cream dish (and a bit fancy considering the holes in Amos's knowledge base).
Think I've been living in Canada too long.
Thing that struck me the most about the episode was Amos and Clarissa out in the snow without gloves and any sort of headwear.
We'll hand wave that away as a result of the asteroid impacts messing with the climate (might not be enough to cause a nuclear winter but there would have still be a colossal amount of dirt and crud thrown in the atmosphere over the imapct areas that could localise the effect).I was thinking it looked way too snowy for the mid-Atlantic location they are supposed to be in.
Draping yourself in a UN flag is enough to war off the cold, apparently.Think I've been living in Canada too long.
Thing that struck me the most about the episode was Amos and Clarissa out in the snow without gloves and any sort of headwear.
Snow as far south as northern Florida is not unknown. The view shown of Earth from space indicated perhaps that the episode is set during the northern hemisphere's winter with the terminator position suggesting the time of year is nearer one of the equinoxes than the solstice. Amos also mentions that the Sun also appears to be as dim as the full Moon, suggesting that sunlight is being blocked by the debris thrown into the upper atmosphere.I was thinking it looked way too snowy for the mid-Atlantic location they are supposed to be in.
Snow as far south as northern Florida is not unknown. The view shown of Earth from space indicated perhaps that the episode is set during the northern hemisphere's winter with the terminator position suggesting the time of year is nearer one of the equinoxes than the solstice. Amos also mentions that the Sun also appears to be as dim as the full Moon, suggesting that sunlight is being blocked by the debris thrown into the upper atmosphere.
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