My impression is that the survivors were the people who were already crewing the 12 stations when the cataclysm wiped out everyone on the surface.
Potentially the case, but they didn't really explain one way or another. They just said the survivors were from the 12 countries that already had operating space stations. Presumably those countries also had operating space programs, so it's possible that some who weren't directly nuked made it off the surface.
I'm extrapolating from Clarke's line in the opening narration that the war killed everyone on Earth. Either way, the various stations seem to have been large and advanced enough to already have fair-sized permanent populations -- not like the current space station with just three or four people aboard. And they wouldn't have had room to take in many refugees, I'd think.
I mean, unless they did some asteroid-mining, they'd pretty much be stuck with the resources and equipment they had at the start, which tells us they must've been pretty well-equipped and well-populated stations even before the war. And that means that, while it's
possible that some refugees made it up from the surface, that isn't
necessary for the Ark to have had a substantial population base to start with.
Good setup. Terrible musical interludes.
I'm not a fan of that type of music, or of the use of songs for underscoring to begin with, but I was amused by how appropriate, in a heavy-handed and literal way, the chosen songs' lyrics were for the events they accompanied. I recognized that first song with the "Welcome to the new world" ("new age"?) lyrics -- I think the CW used it in promos for something at one point -- but apparently its lyrics actually are about a post-apocalyptic, radioactive environment or something, from what I could pick up.
And the show was screaming "FILMED IN CANADA!!!" to anyone who's ever watched genre TV, or more than one episode of Stargate. Doesn't help that Kelly Hu is slumming on this show AND Arrow too (I know she's from the States), but Alessandro Juilani had two whole lines here (adding to his couple from Almost Human earlier on), and that Asian henchguy was familiar from several things as well.
The actor's name is Terry Chen. He's one of two recurring
Continuum players I noted here, the other being
Richard Harmon (whose face seems to doom him to playing creepy and menacing characters; in this case he was one of the bullies who became Bellamy's enforcers by the end of the episode).
Only a matter of time before we see other familiar faces from the Vancouver actor's pool...
You say that like it's a bad thing.
-even a possibly dilapidated drop shuttle (I must have missed the line where it was referred to as a clunker)-it looked pretty nice to me...the set designers making it look nicer than the script described possibly.
Well, it's in space. It's not like there's a lot of stuff in the environment to cause it to rust or get covered in barnacles or anything. What matters isn't how it looked, but how it functioned -- it went off course, it made a rough landing, and its communications array and other important equipment didn't survive re-entry and impact. Clearly not a reliable piece of equipment.
It's still hard to believe the station leaders have been sitting on their hands not investigating whether Earth was habitable. I can accept the global satellite network failing, preventing them from surveying or photographing the surface , but they've waiting until 3-4 months before the end to do...this?
We're talking about an iron-fisted dystopian regime. Rulers like that aren't prone to disrupt the status quo on which their power is based, even if they know it's heading their nations for disaster. That's why things got so bad in the USSR and why they're still so horrific in North Korea. The Ark's leaders know that as long as the human race is confined to the Ark, they can maintain absolute control, but if people are free to go back to Earth and live there, then the dictatorship will dissolve. So naturally they resisted attempting to resettle Earth until they had no other choice.
Heck, they're probably hoping the expedition will conclude the Earth is still unlivable, that it will just buy them enough time to fix the life support systems and restore the status quo on the Ark.