Independence Day ripped off V, not the other way around.There were definitely shades of Independence Day in the arrival of the ships, though.
Kenneth Johnson: Dean Devlin and Roland Emmerich (who did Independence Day) once cornered me at an awards ceremony and said, "We've always wanted to meet you -- we've been ripping you off for years." Ha ha. We all laughed. But they were telling the truth.
Independence Day ripped off V, not the other way around.There were definitely shades of Independence Day in the arrival of the ships, though.
http://www.thescifiworld.net/interviews/kenneth_johnson_01.htm
Kenneth Johnson: Dean Devlin and Roland Emmerich (who did Independence Day) once cornered me at an awards ceremony and said, "We've always wanted to meet you -- we've been ripping you off for years." Ha ha. We all laughed. But they were telling the truth.
Independence Day ripped off V, not the other way around.There were definitely shades of Independence Day in the arrival of the ships, though.
There had been no warning when the great ships came pouring out of the unknown depths of space. Countless times this day had been described in fiction, but no one had really believed that it would ever come. Now it had dawned at last; the gleaming, silent shapes hanging over every land were the symbol of a science man could not hope to match for centuries. For six days they had floated motionless above his cities, giving no hint that they knew of his existence. But none was needed; not by chance alone could those mighty ships have come to rest so precisely over New York, London, Paris, Moscow, Rome, Cape Town, Tokyo, Canberra. . . .
How can something be self derivative? Were the Centurions in nuBSG derivative, or what about that black car with the swooshy red light in that (mercifully) short lived Knight Rider revival?Yes, well, either way, the whole thing is very derivative. Cool, but derivative.
Of course that's true, since V predated ID4 by 13 years. Then again, the moment I first saw the original V back in 1983, I could tell right off that it was imitating Arthur C. Clarke's 1953 novel Childhood's End:
There had been no warning when the great ships came pouring out of the unknown depths of space. Countless times this day had been described in fiction, but no one had really believed that it would ever come. Now it had dawned at last; the gleaming, silent shapes hanging over every land were the symbol of a science man could not hope to match for centuries. For six days they had floated motionless above his cities, giving no hint that they knew of his existence. But none was needed; not by chance alone could those mighty ships have come to rest so precisely over New York, London, Paris, Moscow, Rome, Cape Town, Tokyo, Canberra. . . .
I'm a lifelong fan of Kenneth Johnson's work, but one thing he's not is original.
I can't imagine the amount of power it would require to keep something that big hovering off the ground.
The engineers weren't in charge of the design of those suckers. Think about it from a PR perspective. Anna does.^No, any sensible engineer would design the ship to orbit the planet and send down reasonable-sized landing craft. Contrary to what Star Trek and other shows tend to claim, orbit requires no power at all.
Are the Visitor motherships in this version bigger than the ones in the original?
The original V claimed they were 3 miles across. I'm not sure it's quoted in the dialog, but I distinctly remember it in the summary/previews of the first or second mini-series. Most likely The Final Battle. I can still hear that narrator's voice stressing "three miles across."
Looking back I'm not sure all of the Visitor ships in the original were the same size anyway. When Pamela's ship arrived in TFB, wasn't it larger than Diana's?
The original V claimed they were 3 miles across. I'm not sure it's quoted in the dialog, but I distinctly remember it in the summary/previews of the first or second mini-series. Most likely The Final Battle. I can still hear that narrator's voice stressing "three miles across."
That sounds about right. One kilometer did strike me as too small.
For what it's worth, Midtown Manhattan is about two miles wide east to west. The new motherships are clearly far smaller:
http://gallery.v-fans.net/displayimage.php?album=29&pos=225
It looks like the mothership there stretches roughly from Second Avenue to Madison Avenue, or a little less, which would make it only around 2/3 of a kilometer across, or 2/5 of a mile. So a lot smaller than the originals.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.