Also, there's effective faster-than-light communication in Archer's era, whereas communication with distant points in FP requires the disassembly of the ship's drive and the construction of a custom device to "short-circuit the continuum on a five or six parsec level."
...such elaborate exceptions to terminology...
But the titillating thing here is that the terminology is so similar. There's this united planet federation thing that's almost smack on...
I like FP just as it is, part of its own universe. I see no need to bring it into the already over-crowded (even w/o the spin-offs) Star trek continuity.
So you're saying that Benetton is part of the Trek universe??But the titillating thing here is that the terminology is so similar. There's this united planet federation thing that's almost smack on...
Well, to the extent of having the word "United" in there somewhere, but that's hardly "smack on." By the same token we can make the United States and the United Nations congruent with the "United Federation of Planets." Hell, "United Colors Of Benetton" is pretty close.
MORBIUS: No record of their physical nature has survived... except, perhaps, in the form
of this characteristic arch. I suggest you consider it
in comparison to one of our functionally designed human doorways.
Forbidden Planet actually might fit better with the currently-fashionable sparsely-populated or "empty universe" ideas than with Trek's "crowded universe." You look at the maps of the Federation or at the stories themselves and you know that Roddenberry's explorers couldn't throw a stick out the airlock without hitting a world filled with intelligent bipeds.
C57-D seems to be exploring a big, empty, mysterious universe where humanity has found more than one world enough like Earth to make colonization feasible, but until the opening of the movie has not encountered aliens.
And when they do find them, no pointy-eared bipeds nor a foam-rubber forehead in sight:
MORBIUS: No record of their physical nature has survived... except, perhaps, in the form
of this characteristic arch. I suggest you consider it
in comparison to one of our functionally designed human doorways.
An early example is Scott describing the Romulan power source in "Balance Of Terror" as "simple impulse:" we will come to learn that in the Trek universe "impulse" always refers to sublight drive, if not a specific drive technology, and it's therefore impossible for the Romulan ship to do what it's said to do since it lacks an FTL drive. Hell, if it's so important for the Romulans to return home in order for their mission to succeed (despite one of them having "broken the code of silence" to inform home base of their victory) then the Federation will have decades if not centuries to prepare for their next attack.![]()
Forbidden Planet actually might fit better with the currently-fashionable sparsely-populated or "empty universe" ideas than with Trek's "crowded universe." You look at the maps of the Federation or at the stories themselves and you know that Roddenberry's explorers couldn't throw a stick out the airlock without hitting a world filled with intelligent bipeds.
- The Space Cruiser C57D had a male-dominated, all-white crew
- The enlisted men on the C57D looked like sailors, not like starship crewmen.
- All C57D personnel acted like a strictly military unit, not the pseudo-military Starfleet discipline we saw in TREK.
- Robbie the Robot was no Data or Norman; his presence suggested a society where it would not be a shock to see automated servants.
- The C57D was presented as an entire all-in-one starship not unlike the Jupiter II of LOST IN SPACE fame. This saucer had no nacelles or architecture that suggested anything remotely similar to the warp drive of TOS.
- The whole atmosphere of FP is typically less serious and less cerebral than TOS.
I'd say a line like that would reinforce the idea implicit in "Metamorphosis" that before Cochrane nobody in the local stellar neighborhood had warp drive.I also recall that in the James Blish adaptation of the episode Cochrane says something like, "You're a Vulcan, aren't you? When I was there..." and then he's distracted by looking over the shuttlecraft. I might be remembering this wrong but that is what I remember. We know that JB often based his adaptations on earlier script drafts and it's possible that that was Cochrane's original statement before it was changed. If it is based on a line in an earlier script draft then it strongly suggests that the writers were saying Cochrane's experiment and when he met Vulcans are separate events in time and not at all related.
This is one thing that's puzzled me. If the educator and records in Morbius' lab contain the whole of the Krell's knowledge, it must contain that on their own biology and physiology unless some Krell's Id-spawn erased it. Even information on the other native life on Altair IV would give some hint... assuming Altair IV's their homeworld.Forbidden Planet actually might fit better with the currently-fashionable sparsely-populated or "empty universe" ideas than with Trek's "crowded universe." You look at the maps of the Federation or at the stories themselves and you know that Roddenberry's explorers couldn't throw a stick out the airlock without hitting a world filled with intelligent bipeds.
C57-D seems to be exploring a big, empty, mysterious universe where humanity has found more than one world enough like Earth to make colonization feasible, but until the opening of the movie has not encountered aliens.
And when they do find them, no pointy-eared bipeds nor a foam-rubber forehead in sight:
MORBIUS: No record of their physical nature has survived... except, perhaps, in the form
of this characteristic arch. I suggest you consider it
in comparison to one of our functionally designed human doorways.
I was thinking much the same thing--I just don't like the idea that FP takes place in a galaxy crawling with actors in latex appliques.
Anybody ever seen a copy of the screenplay? What other hints might there be?Reference: 1979 CINEFANTASTIQUE Magazine Double-Issue (Volume 8 - Number 2 & Volume 8 - Number 3) MAKING FORBIDDEN PLANET - By Frederick S. Clarke and Steve Rubin
In the article the Forbidden Planet's film's cinematographer, George Folsey states:
"The Krell were originally frog-like in nature with two long legs and a big tail. They were never shown, but it was indicated in the original screenplay that the ramps between the steps were designed to accommodate their dragging tail."
FP has already been Trekified. It's called "The Cage" with Alta as the only survivor of the crash and a handful of Krell still alive. GR's original description of the Krell was "crablike" something which might fit well through those pentagonal doors. Some lines in the script even hint the Talosians' power of illusion comes from using a machine like the Krell's rather than it being a natural ability.Still, it would be an interesting fan fiction / photomanip / fan film exercise to imagine Valiant or ENT-era TREKified FP story, remade in TREK's image.
But the titillating thing here is that the terminology is so similar. There's this united planet federation thing that's almost smack on...
Altair is, what, seventeen or so light years from Earth?
Forbidden Planet actually might fit better with the currently-fashionable sparsely-populated or "empty universe" ideas than with Trek's "crowded universe." You look at the maps of the Federation or at the stories themselves and you know that Roddenberry's explorers couldn't throw a stick out the airlock without hitting a world filled with intelligent bipeds.
C57-D seems to be exploring a big, empty, mysterious universe where humanity has found more than one world enough like Earth to make colonization feasible, but until the opening of the movie has not encountered aliens.
And when they do find them, no pointy-eared bipeds nor a foam-rubber forehead in sight:
MORBIUS: No record of their physical nature has survived... except, perhaps, in the form
of this characteristic arch. I suggest you consider it
in comparison to one of our functionally designed human doorways.
An early example is Scott describing the Romulan power source in "Balance Of Terror" as "simple impulse:" we will come to learn that in the Trek universe "impulse" always refers to sublight drive, if not a specific drive technology, and it's therefore impossible for the Romulan ship to do what it's said to do since it lacks an FTL drive. Hell, if it's so important for the Romulans to return home in order for their mission to succeed (despite one of them having "broken the code of silence" to inform home base of their victory) then the Federation will have decades if not centuries to prepare for their next attack.![]()
:sighs: Not THIS again. Do we really need to explain this over and over again? It is NOT a contradiction. Kirk asked for what POWER source they had, and this is what Scotty answers. POWER source, and DRIVE are two entirely different things. You can use a simple power source for the impulse drive to power a warp drive and go faster than light. You'd go slower than a full powered warp core designed to power a warp drive, hence why Kirk replies to Scotty that they can outrun the Romulans.
And you what what the funny thing is; if you don't go by what's fashionable but by science, our present understanding of science says our universe and our galaxy, has to be positively teaming with life just about everywhere. Life can live and survive in nearly every circumstance, and we've seen the building blocks of life, if not the very first forms of life itself, in nebulae.
Life may be everywhere in the FP universe just not intelligent life. I'm willing to bet there is or has been life on at least three other bodies in our solar system, but technologically advanced intelligence only arose on one and in one species. And life on Earth got along fine without our level of intelligence for millions of years. Or in the FP universe life itself might be extraordinarily rare, explaining the Krell's interest in Earth and the large number of terrestrial animals on Altair IV.Forbidden Planet actually might fit better with the currently-fashionable sparsely-populated or "empty universe" ideas than with Trek's "crowded universe." You look at the maps of the Federation or at the stories themselves and you know that Roddenberry's explorers couldn't throw a stick out the airlock without hitting a world filled with intelligent bipeds.
And you what what the funny thing is; if you don't go by what's fashionable but by science, our present understanding of science says our universe and our galaxy, has to be positively teaming with life just about everywhere. Life can live and survive in nearly every circumstance, and we've seen the building blocks of life, if not the very first forms of life itself, in nebulae. Life thus starts in space, in the clouds that form from exploding stars, and as new planets form, they land, and away we go.
Life should be everywhere in various shapes and forms.
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