Planet of the Apes (1968) said:TAYLOR
(confidently)
We're some three hundred and twenty
light years from Earth. On an unnamed
planet in orbit around a star in the
constellation of Orion.
(looks off at
the "sun")
That could be Bellatrix
So, where were they headed? Does it say how long they were supposed to be in cryogenics for?
Anyway, it's odd that the script referenced "Dr. Hasslein" as the originator of the time-dilation theory rather than Einstein. Though didn't Escape follow that lead and include Hasslein as a character?
Didn't one of them refer to the sun by another name - sirix, I believe. An astrophysics student from HS told me that was a sun in Andromeda.
Anyway, it's odd that the script referenced "Dr. Hasslein" as the originator of the time-dilation theory rather than Einstein. Though didn't Escape follow that lead and include Hasslein as a character?
Yep, played by Dr. Forbin.
So, where were they headed? Does it say how long they were supposed to be in cryogenics for?
They never say what the intended destination was, but when Landon asks Taylor why he's not more broken up about Stewart's death, he replies that she's been dead nearly a year. Landon then says that would mean they've been away from Earth for 18 months. "Our time," Taylor adds.
Of course, that figure adds another fly to the ointment. According to the ship's clock, they were in flight for 2006 years (1972 to 3978). Do the math on the time dilation for those figures and there's no way they would only have traveled 320 light years. To cut 2006 years down to a year and a half, they would need to be moving at 0.9999972c; that would have sent them about 5 light hours short of 2006 light years from home. It's just another one of the things about the movie that just don't quite add up.
The failure was apparently caused by a combination of two factors. Improper operation of the Atlas airborne beacon equipment resulted in a loss of the rate signal from the vehicle for a prolonged period. The airborne beacon used for obtaining rate data was inoperative for four periods ranging from 1.5 to 61 seconds in duration. Additionally, the Mariner 1 Post Flight Review Board determined that the omission of a hyphen in coded computer instructions in the data-editing program allowed transmission of incorrect guidance signals to the spacecraft. During the periods the airborne beacon was inoperative the omission of the hyphen in the data-editing program caused the computer to incorrectly accept the sweep frequency of the ground receiver as it sought the vehicle beacon signal and combined this data with the tracking data sent to the remaining guidance computation. This caused the computer to swing automatically into a series of unnecessary course corrections with erroneous steering commands which finally threw the spacecraft off course.
Anyway, it's odd that the script referenced "Dr. Hasslein" as the originator of the time-dilation theory rather than Einstein. Though didn't Escape follow that lead and include Hasslein as a character?
Yep, played by Dr. Forbin.
Yes, it was actor Eric Braeden who played Dr. Otto Hasslein in "Escape from the Planet of the Apes" released in 1971 and he played Dr. Charles Forbin in "Colossus: The Forbin Project" released in 1970./\
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.