Well, you can see fanciful space vistas treated as real in any number of sci-fi movies and shows. Presumably we're meant to accept that it's realistic by the standards of the miniseries' universe.The only way that ruse could hold up is if the second generation onboard knows absolutely nothing about space or science and is too ignorant to question all the bizarre things involved in the mission. Like the weird rainbow space vista...
So what changed between you saying it and me saying it?Some guy named Christopher said:
Although it doesn't excuse the fanciful space imagery and the black dust clouds going by outside the ship windows
Yes, I'm aware of what Alpha Centauri is, since I went to sixth grade science class. My point, that the means of determining if there's a planet there, did not exist in 1963 (and it's even difficult now), so they would have no way of knowing whether they were sending 600+ people to a habitable planet or not. It's a moot point since there's no actual mission, but the passengers and crew should realistically wonder about their destination and whether they would risk so many lives and spend so much money on a mission that's a total crapshoot since they have no verification of a destination planet.Actually Alpha Centauri has always been seen as a leading candidate for colonization. It's the nearest star system to Sol and thus the easiest to reach, and its A component is a yellow star very much like Sol. There's been uncertainty over the decades about whether a binary star could host planets, but Alpha Centauri has still always been seen as a likely candidate. Keep in mind that it was the destination of the Jupiter 2 in Lost in Space, which premiered in 1965. And that's just one of many examples in fiction from the '40s through the '60s, let alone the decades since.,going to a star system they couldn't have known had any planets or not in 1963
I'm also aware of Project Orion. My point, which again was the exact same one you made...Somewhat fanciful, yes, but the captions said it was an "Orion-class" ship, no doubt referencing Project Orion, a proposal for a nuclear-pulse propulsion ship dating from 1958. So it's not completely implausible that the original participants could've been tricked into believing that the government's research in the field was more advanced than it really was.
... Is that anyone with even a layman's understanding of space travel should be able to determine that building a craft of that size and sophistication two years after we barely limped into space for the first time would be a near impossibility, even if the idea for it already existed. There should be more Neos questioning whether they're in the Matrix.It does handily resolve most of the implausibilities in the premise -- there is no bloomin' way a mission of that magnitude could've been possible in 1963
I don't know, they seemed pretty adamant about turning around ASAP, going so far as to sabotage sections of the ship, which seems pretty urgent for a process that will take decades. If it's all going to only benefit your kids or your kids kids, then it would probably be better to affect change politically rather than sabotaging finite resources and critical systems and committing murder (if that's tied to their efforts to turn the "ship" around).I don't think they said anything about wanting to get back to Earth within their lifetimes. Maybe they just want their children to be able to live on Earth rather than struggling to terraform an inhospitable world.
Thanks.One was already released, although it's not very detailed:
http://io9.com/check-out-this-diagram-of-ascensions-huge-generation-sh-1667773667
OK, I went back and finished the episode. And the plot twist makes me care even less
They're not even in space? They're just sitting in a simulator? It's just a social experiment?* That makes me... not... care... *yes, I realize it's a test run for the real deal. my point stands.
Yeah...He's come down with a servere case of God Complex. The actor was okay in the more limited scenes in Part 1, but I found myself wishing for a stronger actor here, as his role as master manipulator expanded.Wow, Harris is a real creep. He stole Dr. Bryce's seahorse necklace so he could give it to his wife and pretend she was the subject of his voyeuristic crush. What's that they say about absolute power? He calls the crew "family," but he's just using them, and not only them.
Terrific. So will Starchild wave her hands, start to glow and fake land the mothership?A lot of this is interesting, but I don't like the emphasis on the kid developing psychic powers. It's such a tiresome cliche. So somehow this whole thing has been about trying to breed psychics? Lame.
Yeah...He's come down with a servere case of God Complex. The actor was okay in the more limited scenes in Part 1, but I found myself wishing for a stronger actor here, as his role as master manipulator expanded.Wow, Harris is a real creep. He stole Dr. Bryce's seahorse necklace so he could give it to his wife and pretend she was the subject of his voyeuristic crush. What's that they say about absolute power? He calls the crew "family," but he's just using them, and not only them.
Dissappointed that this massive project turned out to be nothing more than a think tank for developing new technologies (after it's original purpose was scuttled due to the end of the nuclear war threat) .
I find the "surprise" ending of Pt. 1 an insult to imagination, intelligence (why doesn't anyone aboard wonder as to their use of "artificial gravity"?), and the entire generation ship lineage of storytelling. That said, I'll likely tune in to Pt. 2 at least, if only to see if the thing has any payoff.
Blah...I wanted more than that. Something grander. Profound. Did they really need to spend billions creating and maintaining this project, just to create Mutants/Inhumans/Metahumans?]
I the selective breeding program to produce somebody like Christa was the point all along. And any scientists on the ship originally would be long since dead by now.
I seem to be one of the few who prefers it being fake because it would make no damn sense if it were real.
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