Damn, that really freaks me out.[yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7X1ntOgL70[/yt]
Clip from the movie.
Damn, that really freaks me out.[yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7X1ntOgL70[/yt]
Clip from the movie.
My big concern about this film is mixing the hard 2001-esque sci fi concepts of time, worholes, black holes etc, with the overwrought sentimentality of the Earth scenes. I don't think the mixture of these two separate genres can work. 2001 is a classic because it observed humanity as if looking at it from afar as if into a fishbowl.
^Chilling. Government-approved textbooks teaching the party line.
Put simply (and apologies if this has already been explained) the movie is about Earth facing a massive famine and overpopulation, and the need for humanity to find a new home. A FTL ship has been constructed, and McConeghy's character is one of the pilots of the ship on a mission to find a new home for humanity.
[yt]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7X1ntOgL70[/yt]
Clip from the movie.
Obviously, I haven't seen the film, but making McConaughey's character have this "one man against the entire planet" angle strikes me as absurd. Can't he just be the right man for the job? Is there some requirement that he be a hardcore rebel against Obvious Strawmen?
It just seems so heavy-handed.
Obviously, I haven't seen the film, but making McConaughey's character have this "one man against the entire planet" angle strikes me as absurd. Can't he just be the right man for the job? Is there some requirement that he be a hardcore rebel against Obvious Strawmen?
It just seems so heavy-handed.
Did you just really write an "I haven't seen it but I am going to criticize it based on my incomplete perception of the parts of the finished work that have been revealed" review?![]()
Obviously, I haven't seen the film, but making McConaughey's character have this "one man against the entire planet" angle strikes me as absurd. Can't he just be the right man for the job? Is there some requirement that he be a hardcore rebel against Obvious Strawmen?
It just seems so heavy-handed.
Did you just really write an "I haven't seen it but I am going to criticize it based on my incomplete perception of the parts of the finished work that have been revealed" review?![]()
I'm just judging that one scene which, at least out of context, looks ridiculously ham-fisted.
I'm sure I'll end up watching the whole thing in order to better judge it as an entire film.
Obviously, I haven't seen the film, but making McConaughey's character have this "one man against the entire planet" angle strikes me as absurd. Can't he just be the right man for the job? Is there some requirement that he be a hardcore rebel against Obvious Strawmen?
It just seems so heavy-handed.
Did you just really write an "I haven't seen it but I am going to criticize it based on my incomplete perception of the parts of the finished work that have been revealed" review?![]()
"Obvious straw men?" Hardly, when you consider how many factions in the United States today are pushing for exactly this kind of propagandistic revisionist history, whether it's to promote creationism or to whitewash the less admirable parts of American history. The reason I found the scene chilling is because it's so true to life. There's a lot of genuine Moon-landing denialism in the real world today, alongside a huge amount of anti-intellectual and anti-science attitudes in the American far right, and it's disturbingly plausible that we could potentially see the rise to dominance of a faction that finds it politically convenient to deny the reality of the Moon landings. There have always been people saying "We should focus on solving our problems here on Earth rather than waste our efforts on space," ignoring all the ways that space could solve our problems on Earth.
Indeed, one thing that's very plausible about that scene is that it will be impossible for us to maintain a modern technological civilization for long if we don't maintain a presence in space. We're running out of materials on Earth that are vital to our high-tech infrastructure, both rare-earth metals and helium. Liquid helium is essential for the low-temperature manufacture of a lot of important hardware and the functioning of a lot of scientific equipment, but our supply of helium on Earth is running out quickly and governments are doing nothing to stem the loss. If we don't start mining asteroids and/or the Lunar surface in the next two decades, we may very well end up regressing technologically as shown in the movie clip. And it's quite plausible that the governments whose policies led to that disaster might deny that we ever went into space in the first place, rather than admitting that it was their own screwups that kept us from taking advantage of the resources of space.
"Obvious straw men?" Hardly, when you consider how many factions in the United States today are pushing for exactly this kind of propagandistic revisionist history, whether it's to promote creationism or to whitewash the less admirable parts of American history. The reason I found the scene chilling is because it's so true to life. There's a lot of genuine Moon-landing denialism in the real world today, alongside a huge amount of anti-intellectual and anti-science attitudes in the American far right, and it's disturbingly plausible that we could potentially see the rise to dominance of a faction that finds it politically convenient to deny the reality of the Moon landings. There have always been people saying "We should focus on solving our problems here on Earth rather than waste our efforts on space," ignoring all the ways that space could solve our problems on Earth.
Indeed, one thing that's very plausible about that scene is that it will be impossible for us to maintain a modern technological civilization for long if we don't maintain a presence in space. We're running out of materials on Earth that are vital to our high-tech infrastructure, both rare-earth metals and helium. Liquid helium is essential for the low-temperature manufacture of a lot of important hardware and the functioning of a lot of scientific equipment, but our supply of helium on Earth is running out quickly and governments are doing nothing to stem the loss. If we don't start mining asteroids and/or the Lunar surface in the next two decades, we may very well end up regressing technologically as shown in the movie clip. And it's quite plausible that the governments whose policies led to that disaster might deny that we ever went into space in the first place, rather than admitting that it was their own screwups that kept us from taking advantage of the resources of space.
About 7% of Americans believe the Moon landings were faked. For comparison, 4% believe the world is run by Reptilian aliens.
You may be overblowing this a little bit.
"Obvious straw men?" Hardly, when you consider how many factions in the United States today are pushing for exactly this kind of propagandistic revisionist history, whether it's to promote creationism or to whitewash the less admirable parts of American history. The reason I found the scene chilling is because it's so true to life. There's a lot of genuine Moon-landing denialism in the real world today, alongside a huge amount of anti-intellectual and anti-science attitudes in the American far right, and it's disturbingly plausible that we could potentially see the rise to dominance of a faction that finds it politically convenient to deny the reality of the Moon landings. There have always been people saying "We should focus on solving our problems here on Earth rather than waste our efforts on space," ignoring all the ways that space could solve our problems on Earth.
Indeed, one thing that's very plausible about that scene is that it will be impossible for us to maintain a modern technological civilization for long if we don't maintain a presence in space. We're running out of materials on Earth that are vital to our high-tech infrastructure, both rare-earth metals and helium. Liquid helium is essential for the low-temperature manufacture of a lot of important hardware and the functioning of a lot of scientific equipment, but our supply of helium on Earth is running out quickly and governments are doing nothing to stem the loss. If we don't start mining asteroids and/or the Lunar surface in the next two decades, we may very well end up regressing technologically as shown in the movie clip. And it's quite plausible that the governments whose policies led to that disaster might deny that we ever went into space in the first place, rather than admitting that it was their own screwups that kept us from taking advantage of the resources of space.
About 7% of Americans believe the Moon landings were faked. For comparison, 4% believe the world is run by Reptilian aliens.
You may be overblowing this a little bit.
"Obvious straw men?" Hardly, when you consider how many factions in the United States today are pushing for exactly this kind of propagandistic revisionist history, whether it's to promote creationism or to whitewash the less admirable parts of American history. The reason I found the scene chilling is because it's so true to life. There's a lot of genuine Moon-landing denialism in the real world today, alongside a huge amount of anti-intellectual and anti-science attitudes in the American far right, and it's disturbingly plausible that we could potentially see the rise to dominance of a faction that finds it politically convenient to deny the reality of the Moon landings. There have always been people saying "We should focus on solving our problems here on Earth rather than waste our efforts on space," ignoring all the ways that space could solve our problems on Earth.
Indeed, one thing that's very plausible about that scene is that it will be impossible for us to maintain a modern technological civilization for long if we don't maintain a presence in space. We're running out of materials on Earth that are vital to our high-tech infrastructure, both rare-earth metals and helium. Liquid helium is essential for the low-temperature manufacture of a lot of important hardware and the functioning of a lot of scientific equipment, but our supply of helium on Earth is running out quickly and governments are doing nothing to stem the loss. If we don't start mining asteroids and/or the Lunar surface in the next two decades, we may very well end up regressing technologically as shown in the movie clip. And it's quite plausible that the governments whose policies led to that disaster might deny that we ever went into space in the first place, rather than admitting that it was their own screwups that kept us from taking advantage of the resources of space.
About 7% of Americans believe the Moon landings were faked. For comparison, 4% believe the world is run by Reptilian aliens.
You may be overblowing this a little bit.
Well, don't forget, the US collapsed and broke apart in 2012 and parts of it were occupied by a combined force of European peacekeepers to stem the chaos.
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