For billions of years...
- 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.
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.
I believe (am not certain) that the LIS robot was designed by the same guy who designed Robby.
Aliens who surveyed our planet 600,000 years ago might have been impressed with the variety of life, but they'd have found no civilized species. They might have evaluated elephants or whales as the most "intelligent" here. And aliens dropping by fifty thousand years in our future might come to the same conclusion. As Brutal Strudel notes, we're talking a timeline of billions of years here - the likelihood of synchronicity between the development of two species is not very good.
No, 600,000 years ago, Homo erectus and H. ergaster were making stone axes and probably other tools made of less durable materials.
Of course, multiple Twilight Zone episodes recycled footage of the C57D in flight or reused the miniature or the set piece of the ship's underside. (Examples include "Death Ship" and "The Invaders," among others.) So if one really wanted to make a case for a '60s SFTV series being in the same universe as Forbidden Planet, one might want to take a look at those TZ episodes.
Raspberries are not canon.If you take TOS by itself, The SNL sketch with John Belushi fits just as well.
FC and ENT are events in Trek continuity prior to the events in TOS and there is no problem with fitting all of that into this, especially as some kind of "thought experiment."
By the same process we could make a bowl of Raspberry Jello fit too.
Raspberries are not canon.If you take TOS by itself, The SNL sketch with John Belushi fits just as well.
FC and ENT are events in Trek continuity prior to the events in TOS and there is no problem with fitting all of that into this, especially as some kind of "thought experiment."
By the same process we could make a bowl of Raspberry Jello fit too.
I finally watched Forbidden Planet a couple of years ago and was really surprised how close it was to Trek. I Thought Leslie Nielsen did a great job as the commander, too bad they didn't make a series with him!
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.
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.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.
I agree, the organisms that are best adapted to extreme enivronments on Earth are Bacteria, not multicellular organisms. It would stand to reason that if multicellular organisms have a hard time in extreme environments on Earth, they'd have the same problem elsewhere.
You must also understand, that people from NASA will never admit there might be and even is more complex life elsewhere.
... 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...
On the Wikipedia entry on the Krell I came across the only description of them I've seen:
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."
You must also understand, that people from NASA will never admit there might be and even is more complex life elsewhere.
Oh, don't be ridiculous. There's no conspiracy to cover up alien life. Nobody would be more thrilled than NASA to find and publicize solid evidence of alien life, because if we knew there were alien life, it would create a renewed surge of interest in space travel and NASA would finally get enough funding to do its job rather than having to make do with the scraps Congress allows it. Saying that NASA would cover up the existence of aliens is saying that NASA would rather be broke than well-funded, and that's just nonsense. I'd believe Forbidden Planet could work as a Trek-universe story before I'd believe that a government agency would deliberately prevent itself from getting increased funding.
Of course, multiple Twilight Zone episodes recycled footage of the C57D in flight or reused the miniature or the set piece of the ship's underside. (Examples include "Death Ship" and "The Invaders," among others.) So if one really wanted to make a case for a '60s SFTV series being in the same universe as Forbidden Planet, one might want to take a look at those TZ episodes.
And some of the uniforms as well. Particularly my all-time favorite TZ, from the season of hour-long episodes, "Death Ship." The crew all wear the short-sleeved uniforms of the C57D.
The people in charge of NASA wish to remain in control of information and you. They are also the same people in control of our governments. Cheap access to space means they lose the control they've been building so carefully over the last century.
That's so far removed from anything resembling reality that it's hilarious. NASA in control of anything?...The idea that they could possibly manage a systematic coverup of anything is pathetically naive, especially given that every reporter in Washington would sell their firstborn child to uncover a massive government conspiracy.
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