I love it when films don't have to pander to a marketing executive's perception of what an audience will understand.
Oh man.. Poor Penny
It could have been worse.
She might have had to share Rolf with Liesl, Louisa, Marta and Gretl.
Actually Gretl was in an episode of Lost in Space.
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I love it when films don't have to pander to a marketing executive's perception of what an audience will understand.
I know that in the original show science was just an opinion, but they had some form of FTL technology or they were supposed to reach their destination by subliminal speed?
Was the space walk in the pilot/second episode happening at super luminal speed?
Also...They do mention light speed on the show and even the word hyperdrive is used many years before Star Wars coined the term.
Proxima Centauri is an alternate name for Alpha Centauri C, the outlying member of the overall ternary system. Pasadena is slightly closer to where I live than Los Angeles, but it's still a suburb of LA. So it's a nitpicky distinction. Besides, as a red-dwarf flare star, Proxima is unlikely to support a habitable planet.
Also...
"Almost at once there followed the discovery of Hyper-Drive, through which the speed of light was first attained, and later greatly surpassed."
—Forbidden Planet, 1956
SPOCK : All decks prepare for hyperdrive.
NUMBER ONE: All decks are ready, sir.
PIKE: Engage.
—"The Cage" made roughly the same time as Lost In Space's pilot.
Star Wars didn't coin the term, it just popularized it.
I know that in the original show science was just an opinion, but they had some form of FTL technology or they were supposed to reach their destination by subliminal speed?
Actually two planets have been confirmed to orbit around Proxima Centauri, with one being close to Earth's size and within the habitable zone https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proxima_Centauri
There are probably instances of the term being used prior to Forbidden Planet in pulp SF literature. It's a short step from using the term hyperspace to hyperdrive and my guess is that is its origin.
There was implied incest in the final Lensman novel, Children of the Lens, which was published in 1954 - although it was first serialised in 1947. It suggests that Kimball Kinnison's children - one boy and four girls - will be the sole progenitors of the replacements for the Arisians. Lost in Space was first broadcast in 1965 so if you count the book rather than the serial, that's a gap of between one and two decades.As a general rule, it's always safe to assume that any term or concept in science fiction originated in prose at least a decade before it was popularized onscreen.
There was implied incest in the final Lensman novel, Children of the Lens, which was published in 1954 - although it was first serialised in 1947. It suggests that Kimball Kinnison's children - one boy and four girls - will be the sole progenitors of the replacements for the Arisians. Lost in Space was first broadcast in 1965 so if you count the book rather than the serial, that's a gap of between one and two decades.
Erm ... and the title of this thread is?
There was implied incest in the final Lensman novel, Children of the Lens, which was published in 1954 - although it was first serialised in 1947. It suggests that Kimball Kinnison's children - one boy and four girls - will be the sole progenitors of the replacements for the Arisians. Lost in Space was first broadcast in 1965 so if you count the book rather than the serial, that's a gap of between one and two decades.
Incest isn't that uncommon in literature, although it's usually accidental:
Surprise Incest | Tropedia | Fandom
Of course, we don't believe Luke and Leia ever really got it on.
There was implied incest in the final Lensman novel, Children of the Lens, which was published in 1954 - although it was first serialised in 1947. It suggests that Kimball Kinnison's children - one boy and four girls - will be the sole progenitors of the replacements for the Arisians. Lost in Space was first broadcast in 1965 so if you count the book rather than the serial, that's a gap of between one and two decades.
Incest isn't that uncommon in literature, although it's usually accidental:
Surprise Incest | Tropedia | Fandom
Of course, we don't believe Luke and Leia ever really got it on.
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