Who else thought Cohaggen (Ronny Cox) looked just like Rodney Dangerfield when he suffering on Mars?
LMAO at this thread.
No, but I do think the effect they used for what Mars does to you was utterly ridiculous. Almost as ridiculous as how breathing air reversed the effect on Quaid and Melina. Of course if it's all a dream then it all makes much more sense.
LMAO at this thread.
No, but I do think the effect they used for what Mars does to you was utterly ridiculous. Almost as ridiculous as how breathing air reversed the effect on Quaid and Melina. Of course if it's all a dream then it all makes much more sense.
The "effect" is intended to be the lower air pressure effecting them it "reverses" itself only because normal airpressure eliminated to supposed stresses on the body.
After their faces did what they did, there's no going back to normal.
It depends on what you were drinking, really.
The "effect" is intended to be the lower air pressure effecting them it "reverses" itself only because normal airpressure eliminated to supposed stresses on the body.
I don't think they were trying to imply that Mars' atmosphere was turning them into the "mutants."
The "effect" is intended to be the lower air pressure effecting them it "reverses" itself only because normal airpressure eliminated to supposed stresses on the body.
I don't think they were trying to imply that Mars' atmosphere was turning them into the "mutants."
Right. It was clearly a fanciful representation of "explosive decompression" -- the myth that being exposed to vacuum causes a human being to swell up and explode from internal pressure. Whereas some movies such as Outland depicted this as an instantaneous water-balloon kind of thing, Total Recall went for a more gradual "inflation" to the point of bursting.
Both are unmitigated rubbish, of course; the body's membranes are more robust than that. The "explosive" part doesn't mean people blow up; it just means that when a pressurized volume of air is exposed to vacuum, the air escapes in a single forceful burst. But it escapes through the available openings, it doesn't push out in all directions. If you're exposed to vacuum, the air in your lungs will burst out through your nose and mouth (so long as you don't foolishly try to hold your breath and risk rupturing your alveoli from the pressure). Also any gas in the digestive tract would explosively decompress from, err, both ends. But the body's membranes are strong enough to hold in the fluid pressure of its innards against vacuum (or against the 0.01 atm surface pressure on Mars). A few surface capillaries might rupture, but that's about it. Being out on the surface of Mars without pressure gear would cause suffocation, desiccation, frostbite, and other nasty things, but nobody would swell up like Augustus Gloop.
I've come to think of Quaid's trip to Mars as a dream anyway. You're basically watching a Hollywood movie within a Hollywood movie. In which case bursting eye balls make perfect sense.
Yep, somewhat bizarrely the most realistic depiction of exposure to vacuum is probably the one in Event Horizon...
Yes, that movie actually did its homework, which is why I kind of like it. It's exceptionally accurate, not only in that regard, but in terms of its planetary science, the physics of spaceflight, etc. I can even somewhat excuse the more seemingly mystical stuff, since it's justified as an aspect of another universe with different physical laws. It's possible that if another universe's laws of physics and causality were sufficiently different, we might find it unbearably disturbing to be exposed to it and it would seem like Hell.
If your face looks like that when you vomit then you've got problems. Most people's eyeballs don't pop out from their eye sockets when they hurl.After their faces did what they did, there's no going back to normal.
That's like saying that after the contortions your face goes through during an intense round of vomiting are permanent.
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