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Post by snath on Jan 19, 2008 2:18:28 GMT -5
I'm new here, just rented the DVD a few days ago.
I had never even heard of the film until the dude at blockbuster told me about it when I rented 28 weeks later (cool film, nowhere near as good as 28 days later, I love Danny Boyle. Train Spotting was great, love the Kubric influence).
ANYWAYS, I saw it and loved it, I'm not sure why since it was really nothing that original. I think it was the cobo of the great visual style, great acting and great music. My only complaint:
How were they not in 0 G while in the observation room? Was that not in the center of the ship? They were not in the artificial Gravity generators. Any explainations? Its ok though, as I said in a previous threat:
Its ok, It is a timless tradition in Sci Fi to ignore the rules of gravity.
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Post by snath on Jan 19, 2008 2:19:32 GMT -5
Previous THREAD, not threat. Typo
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Starshine
Pilot
There will be nothing to show that we were ever here - but stardust.
Posts: 297
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Post by Starshine on Jan 19, 2008 6:25:48 GMT -5
Actually, zero G should be everywhere in the ship, because the living quarters don't rotate to create G-forces. Just the communication-towers cricles around the ship.
It's incorrect of course, but I think Sunshine wouln't work with zero G. Additional, it's very expensive and hard to realize, that is probably the main reason why the most ScFi movies ignores it
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Post by sonnenwind on Nov 7, 2010 19:24:17 GMT -5
It's kinda lame how the communications towers rotated for some unexplained reason, but habitable areas weren't. They could've had the actors in a 1g environment without violating known physics that way.
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