^^^Such a shame what happened to that model.
I think the idea was to recreate the atmosphere of "2001 A Space Odyssey". The problem is that what works well in a film doesn't always work in a television series. And honestly, the writers of the series weren't exactly Kubrik.Extremely slow and characterisation is…rudimentary at best.
I think the idea was to recreate the atmosphere of "2001 A Space Odyssey". The problem is that what works well in a film doesn't always work in a television series. And honestly, the writers of the series weren't exactly Kubrik.
Yep, but usually when one watches TOS or the original Mission Impossible doesn't think "This is so slow!"Or Arthur C. Clarke, for that matter. But TV shows were generally paced a lot more slowly in the 1960s and '70s than they are now.
Or Arthur C. Clarke, for that matter. But TV shows were generally paced a lot more slowly in the 1960s and '70s than they are now.
I loved that about S1 of Space 1999 when I watched it for the first time a few years ago. I haven't really returned to it since so I can't say if I'd still feel the same.I think the idea was to recreate the atmosphere of "2001 A Space Odyssey". The problem is that what works well in a film doesn't always work in a television series. And honestly, the writers of the series weren't exactly Kubrik.
That might be, I can't relate to my niece and nephew on any level with anything "TV" or movies. I know they watch "stuff" but I think it's all just short-form things on Youtube, Tiktok and the like.I'm not so sure about that. I wouldn't because I'm 60 and grew up on that kind of TV. Ask someone in their 20s who's used to Fast & Furious movies and other modern pop culture to sit through a TOS episode or a 1960s Outer Limits episode. I think they'll comment on the pacing. Space: 1999 is a lot closer to that era of TV.
Yep, but usually when one watches TOS or the original Mission Impossible doesn't think "This is so slow!"![]()
Thank you. My point was that Space 1999 isn't slow just for modern viewers, but it was slow even for the context of the time when it was produced, and it was a deliberate choice. It can be seen by comparing it with the second season, where the rhythms are comparable to the American action TV series of the time.It's funny you should mention "M:I". In my 'Behind the Scenes' book, Executive Producer Bruce Geller is quoted as saying at the end of the second season, after a time slot and change in leading man, "The things they used to damn the show, they now use to praise it. Only the inflections have changed. They used to berate it - 'It's so fast!'. Now they praise it - 'It's so fast!'."
The Charlton Comics stories assumed Alpha had their own Hawks.I wish Moonbase Alpha also came equipped with some Hawks (like those seen in War Games). They were cool too.
They didn't have the file for the 3D printerThe Charlton Comics stories assumed Alpha had their own Hawks.
Honestly, the way they could seemingly rebuild and maintain Eagles, it'd be unbelievable if they couldn't have built makeshift Hawk-like vehicles, even if they'd never been issued them while orbiting Earth.
Hence the word "makeshift".They didn't have the file for the 3D printer![]()
I was 11 when S1999 premiered, grew up on Trek and various British action/sci-fi/fantasy shows (Avengers, the Saint, My Partner the Ghost, Thunderbirds, etc.) and found S1999 to be ponderous. It really just wasn't that entertaining of a show TBH.Thank you. My point was that Space 1999 isn't slow just for modern viewers, but it was slow even for the context of the time when it was produced, and it was a deliberate choice. It can be seen by comparing it with the second season, where the rhythms are comparable to the American action TV series of the time.
I was 11 when S1999 premiered
Yep, after 2001 and before Star Wars slowness was the hallmark of any sci-fi film or television work set in outer space that wanted to be taken seriously. I remember Silent Running or Solaris.The slowness, the robotic acting style of Bain especially, these were criticized at the time the show came out.
I suspect these aspects were among the things that the show, so to speak, "inherited" from 2001; they were considered to be appropriate tropes for intellectual science fiction. See also Star Trek: The Motion Picture. They were certainly typical such tropes, how appropriate is debatable.
And then you see the episode and it's. All. glacially. slow. It's amazing how they did it. It takes a special talent to remove all traces of suspense and excitement from such a story. I'm almost in awe.
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