I keep watching Under the Dome and Falling Skies for reasons I, myself, can't even fathom.
Wow. I stopped watching Under the Dome 6 or 7 episodes in -- and me sticking with it that long is hard for me to fathom.

I keep watching Under the Dome and Falling Skies for reasons I, myself, can't even fathom.
I watched it live and agree that I'll check out TV sci-fi but I am rarely satisfied. The flashbacks to Molly Woods (Halle Berry) aboard the space station are the parts I liked. Good CGI visual FX for the exterior of the space station. I think this show like ABC's Defying Gravity (2009) Summer series and Heroes TV series are going to use the flashbacks as major plot device instead of just telling the story in the present.it's so rare for CBS to do science fiction shows that I feel I should support its efforts,
Agreed. The earthbound plot was not that interesting to me. Like Defying Gravity I really liked all I saw for the space-based part of the show.the premise seems like a rehash of things we've seen before. The idea that Berry's character was on a 13-month solo space mission is insanely stupid; NASA would never send anyone on a solo mission in the first place, given the urgency for redundancy in space,
Sure that works for 2 or 3 hours of a show at the most not a whole 13-episode season but for a space-based show story arcs like this could do it for total sci-fi not in an earthbound sci-fi series.This is a "bottle show", which accounts for its absence of guest stars and background performers. The installment also does not incorporate any unique, episode-specific sets. It was filmed to lower the production costs of Enterprise's first season.
The footage shows her reacting warmly and intimately to someone who isn't there. If her superiors had seen it, they would have thought either that she was hallucinating in the middle of a crisis or taking a sexual fantasy break in the middle of a crisis, neither of which would be very good for her. And I can't blame her for not wanting other people to see video footage of her having a sexual experience.
Do you remember the earlier scene where she was looking through a video album? He was the man in the photos, Marcus. Her current husband came in and they talked about how they never would have met if Marcus hadn't died. (Which was a weird and awkwardly written scene, because it came off as Goran Visnjic saying, "Boy, I sure am glad your beloved first husband croaked, because it gave me the perfect chance to get into your pants.")
There was, as I feared, not the slightest attempt to explain the utter absurdity of a 13-month solo space mission. It was an unbelievable premise contrived merely to justify the impossible pregnancy. Unless it turns out the corporation that Knows More Than It's Telling intentionally sent her out there alone as bait or something. But then you'd think people would be asking why they'd do something so bizarre and dangerous as sending an astronaut out alone.
There's plenty of valid reasons why they'd want to experiment on prolonged solo space missions.
Didn't they say that the reason she was doing a solo mission was because the previous two-man mission had gone so badly, resulting in at least one death?
And it does seem like the set up is solely to convince us that there is only one way Molly could have gotten pregnant.
To be fair, it was only a partially solo mission. There was an AI onboard, just not one with a body (as far as we know). So it wasn't like she was completely alone. Doubly so considering she had an AI child at home, so she was used to dealing with them as real people.
I didn't say or imply that it would be a solo interplantetary/interstellar mission. I sad they might be testing it to see how they would handle taking turns being in some kind of hibernation during the trip. If something serious happens, or some sort of deadman switch is involved, the rest of the crew could be awoken prematurely.
Solo missions also happen all the time in Television Land. Buck Rogers and John Crichton, just off the top of my head, both say hello.
Also, they didn't exactly explain much of anything about anything going on in the show, with the sole exception of why they had an AI kid. And even that was only partially explained.
This was just the pilot episode. Maybe we'll get more answers and solid explanations in further episodes. It seems like the producers were trying to introduce the mystery (a locked-room pregnancy) as simply as possible without scaring away a broad audience with scenes of long-winded exposition justifying a solo space mission. Maybe episode two is nothing but a 3D power point presentation from Halle Berry about why a solo space mission is a valuable expenditure for corporations to make in future-ish times. We'll soon find out.
I was also really confused by the scene with the Yasumoto (Hiroyuki Sanada's character) waking up from hibernation or whatever he was in. It seemed like something that should be significant, but there was no real explanation or even hints as to what was going on there. It just seemed random at this point.
Didn't they say that the reason she was doing a solo mission was because the previous two-man mission had gone so badly, resulting in at least one death?
I don't recall any attempt to assert a cause and effect there, and even if there had been, how would that make even the tiniest bit of sense? If it was dangerous to send only two people, wouldn't it be even more dangerous to send just one? Wouldn't it be safer to send an even larger crew, so there'd be more people to help an endangered or injured member and, if the worst happened, more people to take the place of a crew member who died?
I don't recall any attempt to assert a cause and effect there, and even if there had been, how would that make even the tiniest bit of sense? If it was dangerous to send only two people, wouldn't it be even more dangerous to send just one? Wouldn't it be safer to send an even larger crew, so there'd be more people to help an endangered or injured member and, if the worst happened, more people to take the place of a crew member who died?
Not if it was the second astronaut who killed him.
I miss the days of getting a two-hour pilot movie for a series. I feel like that was what they needed here -- some time to flesh out all the things they just vaguely threw out in the first hour.
I miss the days of getting a two-hour pilot movie for a series. I feel like that was what they needed here -- some time to flesh out all the things they just vaguely threw out in the first hour.
Now, that I agree with. Whatever happened to those?
I have to say, I have a great mistrust of mystery shows. Especially when there's a core mystery. Most times they just keep pushing the answer down the road, because once they solve it, they have no more show. They are stretching what was probably a movie pitch or a novel into something that is supposed to go on for years. I'm thinking of Lost, Flash Forward, Under the Dome
Execution can certainly help, but, for me, when the core of your story is a mystery and you don't want to answer it for years.... then I find that frustrating.
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