Forget all other editions, get this one, the features are amazing.
[yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HXWEh9kcGzM[/yt]
[yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HXWEh9kcGzM[/yt]
^ Sorry. I'm clearly having a blond day (and I'm auburn). But if it's any help, today I learned that you're Termis the Vorta and not Tennis the Vorta.
I didn't say it was a well thought out approach.![]()
I solved that one in a thread here a few years ago in which we were asked to come up with revival ideas. It went something like this:
The year is 2099, and the Moon is home to Moonbase Alpha. All the characters from Year 1 are in place. Bergman is the key character in the pilot. He's a darker character, think Dr. Smith from the Lost in Space movie but not evil, but he's also brilliant. Koenig is sent to get Bergman's project moving, while at the same time investigate problems with the nuclear waste on the other side of the Moon. Bergman has been working on an FTL propulsion system (ala wormhole technology), and, it turns out, it is connected to the problems with the nuclear waste that has accumulated on the moon over the past few decades. There's an accident, Bergman's project is caught up with it. A wormhole is generated and, long story short, they can't switch it off. The best the can do is learn to control it somewhat so it doesn't send them into a star; they realize this when the wormhole opens up a couple episodes later too near a singularity (leading to the first major remake of a classic episode: The Black Sun). I'd limit contact with multiple aliens of the week (ala Year 2), and stick with the ideas in Year 1 of the original. Sprinkle in the aliens, etc. here and there, leading up to a remake of The War Games. Introduce the more traditional "Star Treky" stuff like shapeshifting, etc. more slowly, but do get there, but without turning it into Torchwood or Dr. Who or Trek. Depending on the length of the show, I'd probably end it with them realizing that the best course they can manage will eventually take them into the gulf between galaxies; so I'd basically make the last season into them doing their best to find a way to ditch the moon for a habitable planet before it was too late.
I don't think a broadcast network would even be interested. But if I recall correctly, Space: 1999 was syndicated internationally.Can we all agree that Space 2099 needs to stay the hell away from NETWORK TV?...Syndication or a cable station like TNT or USA or even AMC if they wanted to try science fiction...but NO,NO, NO..to the networks...with their interferencefrom the suits and their itchy trigger finger the reboot would be canclled before the closing credits of the first episode.
Can we all agree that Space 2099 needs to stay the hell away from NETWORK TV?...Syndication or a cable station like TNT or USA or even AMC if they wanted to try science fiction...but NO,NO, NO..to the networks...with their interferencefrom the suits and their itchy trigger finger the reboot would be canclled before the closing credits of the first episode.
With that said...bring on the show! I always loved the concept of the moon getting hurled out of orbit.
This sounds great. Though i think a series on a moon base would require just as much vfx as a space station set show.set the new series aboard a space station.
It doesn't take the moon leaving Earth's orbit to accomplish that.The story of the humans fulfilling a new destiny as they move out into the universe is what the series is all about. Take that away, and what's the point of trading on the name of the original series? You might as well call it something else.
It doesn't take the moon leaving Earth's orbit to accomplish that.The story of the humans fulfilling a new destiny as they move out into the universe is what the series is all about. Take that away, and what's the point of trading on the name of the original series? You might as well call it something else.
Did you ever stop to think that the basic premise of the story could be accomplished by simply nuking EARTH and having the moonbase fend for itself without any support from the burned-out cinders of its sponsor nations? That's enough for a reboot, at the very least; it would be at least as different from the original as NuBSG with entirely different kinds of storylines and ultimately leading to a different type of resolution.
newtype_alpha;5797834 Did you ever stop to think that the basic premise of the story could be accomplished by simply nuking EARTH and having the moonbase fend for itself without any support from the burned-out cinders of its sponsor nations? That's enough for a reboot said:I've got a similar idea where the Earth is depopulated by a fast-moving plague (badly engineered and released by terrorists) that kills all human life on the planet, but leaves the rest of Earth's eco-system intact. The moonbase folks can only go home if they can find a cure for this plague. In the meantime, there's home hanging in their sky every day looking very inviting, but remaining totally inaccessible. And then the expedition that had been on Mars when the disaster struck makes it back to the moon with potentially startling discoveries...
Did you ever stop to think that the basic premise of the story could be accomplished by simply nuking EARTH and having the moonbase fend for itself without any support from the burned-out cinders of its sponsor nations? That's enough for a reboot, at the very least; it would be at least as different from the original as NuBSG with entirely different kinds of storylines and ultimately leading to a different type of resolution.
In addition, the moon went through weird space warps and even a black sun [sic; black hole].DAVID:
"Commander. You know those feasibility programs we've been running on Main Computer?"
KOENIG:
"Yes, what about them?"
DAVID:
"Well, it seems our present trajectory will take us past something like ten million planets. Well, it means we should pass near to three thousand, six hundred Earth type planets, statistically. Now, that means about ten Earth type planets for every one on Alpha."
VICTOR:
"And how much older will you be by the time we reach the first of these Earth-type planets?"
DAVID:
"Not very much, Professor. Relatively speaking, that is."
KOENIG:
"More to the point, Kano, have you computed how much older you'll be when we reach the last of those planets."
DAVID:
"Two thousand, five hundred and forty-three years old to be exact, sir."
((Victor smiles))
"Just thought you might like to know."
KOENIG:
"Thank you, Kano."
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