Considering the situation they find themselves in, they should probably call it Deep Space 1999. 

Personally, the idea of the moon being thrown out of the Earth's orbit, by an explosion, just a little to big to swallow.
You have to factor in that the whole thing's been engineered by higher alien intelligences - so there could be all manner of fiendishly complex technology involved. We just don't see it.
Right. Ok.
So, the higher alien intelligences engineered the physically impossible, an explosion big enough to send the moon out of the solar system but not crack in half.
At faster than light speeds...
With life like planets aligned in the trajectory...
And each week the aliens keep pushing the moon on?
Was this in the show or a reboot idea?
In the first season episode "Death's Other Dominion", the lunar castaways learned that the Earth year was 2870. Then, in Season Two's "Journey to Where" the Earth year was given (contradictorily) as 2120. Yet they continued to bill the show as "Space: 1999".
In the first season episode "Death's Other Dominion", the lunar castaways learned that the Earth year was 2870. Then, in Season Two's "Journey to Where" the Earth year was given (contradictorily) as 2120. Yet they continued to bill the show as "Space: 1999".
You have to factor in that the whole thing's been engineered by higher alien intelligences - so there could be all manner of fiendishly complex technology involved. We just don't see it.
Right. Ok.
So, the higher alien intelligences engineered the physically impossible, an explosion big enough to send the moon out of the solar system but not crack in half.
At faster than light speeds...
With life like planets aligned in the trajectory...
And each week the aliens keep pushing the moon on?
You're trying to rationalize something that's mystical and inexplicable. That's the whole ethos of the show.
This was in the original show. They discover in the final episode of series 1 (well, that's the only series really...Was this in the show or a reboot idea?) that there was a purpose behind everything that happened to them. It seems it was no accident. But who can know for certain?
I see. If they were to reboot and this idea of a higher power is doing everything (like not making the moon explode) that would probably have to be strongly hinted at in the pilot. I don't think they could wait.
I see. If they were to reboot and this idea of a higher power is doing everything (like not making the moon explode) that would probably have to be strongly hinted at in the pilot. I don't think they could wait.
That would be a shame. The slow build of the mystery is one of the great things about the series, starting with the questions of why they weren't destroyed by the explosion (oh yes, the question is directly addressed - not that they know the answer) - then the discovery that their course is in some way pre-destined - leading to the final revelation of why they've been cast adrift in the cosmos. (And even then, they can only speculate - it's all suggestion and supposition. Explain a great mystery like that, and the show just becomes mundane and ordinary, not strange and mythical.) Powerful stuff.
I think you could use the basic premise/idea from that one Stephen Baxter Manifold book (Exact title escapes me, sorry!), where the Moon gets swapped from universe to universe, while that universe's Moon replacing it.
You could spend several episodes between "swaps" showing how both sides (Earth and 'Moonbase Alpha' Moon) adapt to the new universe/environment.
Make such swappings seemingly random at first, but have an overall story arc behind why it's happening...
Cheers,
-CM-
Any reboot has to keep the character of Alan Carter: Ace Eagle pilot...in fact that should be his full name...
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