Burnham fell for 4.5 seconds when she rolled out of the open door and landed on the roof of a passing turbolift. Assuming Earth-like gravity, she fell 99m through a significantly taller space. (Let's ignore the fact that she'd impact at ~158km/h and surely die)
Later, the warp core falls for 8 seconds. Assuming it fell under gravity, and assuming crashing into the sides didn't slow it down too much (let's also ignore the horror of a warp core crashing about unsecured inside a shaft...), it fell for at least 200m and possibly as much as 300m.
Canonically, Discovery is 750.5m long, and ~75m tall, with 18 decks (the deck count is explicitly called out in the episode).
Even assuming the ship was a hollow hull with no interior structure at all, there is not enough space inside for what we see here. This episode's visuals are quite simply absurd.
I'm surprised we didn't see the Cloister Room, swimming pool, sitting room, and dressing rooms. Oh, wait -- wrong show.
The fun thing is that the original roller-coaster could have fitted inside the ship, more or less; even the one from the "Pike Era" short could have been argued to have taken place inside a shared starbase-starship network rather than entirely inside the Enterprise; and it's only with the newest incarnation that things become truly (and blatantly) impossible.
Ah, right, what's up with all those wonky shots? I don't need to see an ensign give a status report by having her appear onscreen upside down and rotating and moreover I don't need to see such "artistic effects" several times on the episode. They make me seasick and at times I wasn't sure where up and down where.Among the spatially dubious camera runs in this episode
Oh nosEveryone is concentrated on the funhouse but seem to be forgetting the 20 deck tube that the warp core was allowed bounce around inside.
Also why were there so many turbolifts active? There were only a few people on the ship.
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