Vonstadt I tried to read your post, twice but your avatar is distracting. Where did you get that?
Also my take on the nukes when my wife brought that up was pretty much the same thing, especially being an old ground pounder myself once. To even think about retaking the enviroment after such a weapon is used requires a lot more gear then the average troop would have at his disposal and we were losing and supply lines were hardly stable at that point in the movie.
Nukes are hardly the go to solution in such a scenario as the movie plays out, in fact it might actually end up benifiting the surviving alien force if they are immune to the after effects. I mean it might even give the alien survivors a fall back area that we would not easily be able to pursue them into...which mean further use of nuclear weapons that in the long run will hamper us more than the world the invaders came from.
I mean we have to live hear after the war ...and that would also mean nuking 20 city sites all over the world and most of them are vital and important port cities too.
Vons
Since I've not seen it linked yet here's Ebert's review:
LINK
"Battle: Los Angeles" is noisy, violent, ugly and stupid. Its manufacture is a reflection of appalling cynicism on the part of its makers, who don't even try to make it more than senseless chaos. Here's a science-fiction film that's an insult to the words "science" and "fiction," and the hyphen in between them. You want to cut it up to clean under your fingernails. ...
What I've learned from Independence Day and now this movie? Don't have your auxillary craft powered by a central source that can failry easily be taken out by primitive weapons. Would it be that bad for every craft to be independantly powered and controlled?
..(though that onscreen comment about fluid water only existing here was cringeworthy...
Great movie! Just got back from it and I have no complaints. It is obvious the military helped out with this movie and that is a good thing. I hate seeing movies that pretend to be modern, but are using outdated military equipment that is no longer in use.
..(though that onscreen comment about fluid water only existing here was cringeworthy...
Tell me one other place aside from Earth you know of that has liquid water in abundance on its surface for a fact. Not dissolved in dust and dirt, not frozen in ice caps nor hidden under a 2km thick crust of solid ice.
If you can, you might win a Nobel prize.
..(though that onscreen comment about fluid water only existing here was cringeworthy...
Tell me one other place aside from Earth you know of that has liquid water in abundance on its surface for a fact. Not dissolved in dust and dirt, not frozen in ice caps nor hidden under a 2km thick crust of solid ice.
If you can, you might win a Nobel prize.
Absence of proof isn't proof of absence.
The scientist in the film says "we're the only planet in the known universe with liquid water on it." (emphasis mine)
That's quite a bold statement for someone to make! Considering how limited our sample size is.
Considering what we know of the universe right now, yes, we currently are the only planet in the known universe with liquid water.
Considering what we know of the universe right now, yes, we currently are the only planet in the known universe with liquid water.
Since we already KNOW there are fish in the ocean, this is an incorrect analogy.That's sort of like taking a cup of water out of the ocean, seeing no fish in it and declaring that there's no fish in the ocean.
In the known universe. Known. There may very well be liquid water somewhere in the universe, but so far we don't know about it.It's ludicrous for someone to state with absolute certainty that we are the only planet in the universe with liquid water on it considering we may not even be the only planet in our own solar system with water on it.
You don't seem to be grasping the "known universe" part. We are currently the only planet in the universe as we know it with liquid water. Therefore it's a completely valid statement, though it could have been phrased better.
Since we already KNOW there are fish in the ocean, this is an incorrect analogy.
Considering what we know of the universe right now, yes, we currently are the only planet in the known universe with liquid water.
Indeed. But at the rate we are now finding exoplanets, it will only be a question of time.
But the idea that a civilization capable of interstellar travel would have a hard time melting the ice of Europa is ... still ludicrous. C'mon.
I still don't hold it much against the film, though, but it was one of the very few eye-roll moments. I enjoyed it otherwise.
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