Hey in ST 09 there was an orion girl in Starfleet does that count?
Hey in ST 09 there was an orion girl in Starfleet does that count?
meet a Klingon lawyer or nanny or something.
They're not on the sides, they're in a pass-thru. The building has an opening thru the middle at that point.Oh boy, so he has to navigate to that to shut it off. Sound like this is going to be mindless fun.
A wind turbine I get but are they actually mounted on the sides of the building and not on the roof, that part makes no sense if true.
Klingons speak Klingons, Vulcans speak Vulcan, Andorians speak Andorians so why don't Earthlings speak Earth?
They're not on the sides, they're in a pass-thru. The building has an opening thru the middle at that point.
One thing that annoys me in Sci. Fi. is that even now that they have sophisticated CGI, they usually stick to the humanoid form for the aliens. But that form is extremely unlikely, here on Earth all animals (namely vertebrates) that respond to the One-head-withtwo-eyes-one-nose-one-mouth-and-sometimes-two-ears-on-the-side archetype all have ONE common ancestor!! Take the Octopus for example, some are quite smart, yet they don't look like us, at all! Imagine that for some reason the common ancestor of all vertebrates had been killed around seven hundred million years ago, then plenty of ecological niches would have been left vacant on Earth and a different type of animal would have eveolved to fill them, maybe Octopusses, the descendants of Octopusses are inimaginable to us because they would look like an Octopus the way we look like a herring, but one thing is certain they would not look like us, AT ALL!!!
With respect to the distinction you've drawn between sci-fi and fantasy, that covers a lot of it, but there is much in literature and in TV & film that is difficult to tease into separate categories according to your criteria.
One important set of difficulties has to do with how extraterrestrials are represented. ETs aren't generally themselves manifestations of hypothetical technology. Generally, ETs are posited to have naturally evolved on alien worlds. On a show like Star Trek, many ETs are implausibly humanoid and can pass as human with relatively minimal disguises, and ridiculously from a purely science fiction perspective, human-alien interbreeding is a thing. All of this is much easier to justify in a pure fantasy setting, than in sci-fi, as you've defined the two genres.
As for the whole Sci-Fi vs fantasy thing, for me if the genre elements are explained by magic it's fantasy, if they're explained by science, or "science", it's sci-fi. Sometime you will get magic explained with science, but I still consider fantasy, since it's still called magic and behaves like magic.
And any attempt to come up with, say, an iron-clad distinction between sf and fantasy is doomed to failure because you'll inevitably end up excluding some well-known classics of the field. Is "The Martian Chronicles" sf or fantasy or magic realism or what? More importantly, does it matter?
I think Star Wars is one of the hardest to categorize. It's got robots and lazer guns and faster than light space ships, but it's also got knights (Jedi), wielding swords (lightsabers), and using magic (the force). It also has multiple characters called "Dark Lord" (the Sith) which is one of the biggest fantasy tropes out there, along with the lower class person (Luke, Anakin, Rey) with the great destiny. For pretty much every element you can point to from one genre, you can counter it with one from the other.
But the voice of the writer is a big part of the work and its appeal. A plot is often just the plot; it's the style and execution that matters.
True story: I once ran into a fan who didn't realize that the original GHOSTBUSTERS was a comedy. Seems he'd seen it as a small child, been terrified by it, and remembered it as this really scary horror movie.![]()
But a dog dying is a situation that you could see yourself into. I could never picture myself surrounded by vampires or zombies or whatever.
"Misery" for example is the kind of scary situation that could really happen! In fact, it could happen to any of us. Someone you don't know, for example, has a crush on you and won't take no for an answer... that's the kind of thing that could easily turn into a nightmare.
I'll still probably watch Skyscraper.
Disappointed it's not a remake of The Towering Inferno, but you can't top the classics. I was so hoping this was a remake of that, but it just seems to be an action movie in a tall building with rotor blades on the sides.... WTF?
Well, what Spock actually says is something like 'either the assassins are here or the person who altered the records is here - in either case what we are looking for is here'. That's a reasonable assumption, assuming the Enterprise's records can't be altered remotely, which Spock would know if they could. The problem in the writing comes when somebody asks 'what are we looking for exactly?' and Saavik answers 'two pair of gravity boots' when the answer should've been 'two pair of gravity boots OR evidence of computer tampering'.
Just watch out for the Klingon Ship's Counselor...
Crewman - I just feels so sad lately, and..
Counselor Grond: YOU ARE WEAK AND UNWORTHY! YOU SHOULD DO THE HONORABLE THING AND JUST KILL YOURSELF!
Firstly, you mean Lt. Valeris, not Saavik.
Secondly, given that Valeris was already a mole working on the Enterprise (and presumably was the one who altered the data banks), why DIDN'T they have the assassins beam back to the cloaked Klingon ship? Had the assassins not been on the Enterprise, they never would have been able to smoke out Valeris' involvement and Spock wouldn't have mind melded with her to discover who else was involved in the conspiracy. (Given that Star Trek VI was my favorite movie in high school, finding out that it has so many holes really bothers me.)
You completely missed the point. In the category of fiction that I was discussing, it is the aliens that are implausible compared to the means of reaching them.But space aliens either arrive on Earth in spaceships or we go out and meet them in our spaceships. Either way, making contact with aliens is a function of a piece of technology, thus sci-fi. The alternative would be a wizard summoning a portal to another realm, which would be fantasy.
Just because the technology is implausible doesn't make it fantasy, nor does it make it bad sci-fi. It's just sci-fi that's having fun!
^ Two words: Cloaking device.
Only if they have one, most times they don't
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