[net.movies] 2010 letdown

john@hp-pcd.UUCP (john) (12/09/84)

<<<<


   Ok so sound doesn't travel in space and you can't hear a space ship as
it goes by. One thing that the movie didn't show was the KGB follower ship
that was sent to make sure that the Russians did not defect and take the
Leonov with them. The camera was mounted on this ship.


   Whats wrong with Air Braking!!! The "marshmellow" was the metalized 
balloon that was deployed before the maneuver and ejected after they had
slowed down. The effect looked exactly as I would have expected it to look.

   A few scenes showing Zero-G inside the ships would have helped but they
did always show the Leonov with its rotating section. I assumed that all
the control areas were in that section. Still a trick or two with coriolis
forces would have been a nice touch. As the Leonov approched Discovery it
looked like they were rotating in phase. Did the Leonov sync up with the
rotation of discovery or was that just the easiest way to shoot the special
effect.


John Eaton

!hplabs!hp-pcd!john

patcl@tekecs.UUCP (Pat Clancy) (12/11/84)

All true SF lovers and tech-nerds in general should be
very disappointed in 2010. Where 2001 was one of the first
(or *the* first?) truly intelligent attempts to convincingly depict
a not-to-distant future technology, and show a voyage through
deep space with stunning and painstaking realism, 2010 is just
Battlestar Galactica level cheap thrills for the kiddies.
It's OK for spaceships in a vacuum to noisily roar by
in Star Wars, because that's "fantasy". Its not OK in 2010;
in fact, it's practically blasphemous. Perhaps the general
"sci-fi" audience of the 1980's is simply unaware of the difference
between Hollywood-style pseudo-science and physics.
Besides sound travelling through space, other failings in
the effects/realism department included:
(1) "Air-braking" (passing through Jupitor atmosphere) sequence that 
resembled a burning marshmellow being held in front of a fan;
(2) entire circumnavigation of Jupitor appearing to take about
10 minutes, yielding effective velocity very close to c;
(3) people walking around normally in 0 g;
(4) sloppy paint job evident on close-ups of space pod and
instrument panels in Discovery;
(5) "blat-blat-blat" sound (radar?) coming from probe monitor on
board ship as probe nears moon, which purely for dramatic effect
increases in frequency and loudness as probe nears area where
chlorophyll is present, as if all their instruments were designed
by Mattel.

Pat Clancy
{ucbvax,decvax,ihnp4,allegra,uw-beaver,hplabs}!tektronix!tekecs!patcl

trandolph@cougar.DEC (12/13/84)

>(3) people walking around normally in 0 g;
>
>(5) "blat-blat-blat" sound (radar?) coming from probe monitor on
>board ship as probe nears moon, which purely for dramatic effect
>increases in frequency and loudness as probe nears area where
>chlorophyll is present, as if all their instruments were designed
>by Mattel.
>
>Pat Clancy
>{ucbvax,decvax,ihnp4,allegra,uw-beaver,hplabs}!tektronix!tekecs!patcl

I wonder if anyone remembers - a reason was given for (3) above in the
original 2001 novel - "Velcro" on the floors and the soles of shoes (to
tell the truth, I really didn't notice whether they used that gimmick in
either 2001 the movie or 2010). My own interpretation of the "blat-blat"
was some kind audio altimeter for the human (remote-control) "pilot" - 
why the Leonov's computer wasn't used for the remote control is beyond me...

T.F.Randolph
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patcl@tekecs.UUCP (Pat Clancy) (12/16/84)

>Whats wrong with Air Braking!!! The "marshmellow" was the metalized 
>balloon that was deployed before the maneuver and ejected after they had
>slowed down. The effect looked exactly as I would have expected it to look.

The marshmellow analogy should perhaps have included an explanation.
The thing that ruined it for me was the trail of smoke left by the
Leonov's passage through Jupitor atmosphere. Smoke is particulate
matter which results from a chemical combustion process; ie.,
something's burning up. The only thing that could have been burning
in this case was the balloon, but it seemed to (and had to) survive
intact.  Certainly the heating of the hydrogen/helium atmosphere would
not have produced smoke. The space shuttle doesn't produce
a smoke trail when it reenters, even in an oxygen atmosphere.
Therefore, the reason the smoke trail is there is that someone
in the special effects dept. thought it would look more dramatic that
way, and to hell with reality. This is the same line of reasoning
that gives us blasting noises from rockets igniting in space.
To me it looked like a burning marshmellow, rather than a superheating
spaceship.

One or two people have stated that velcro on the shoes would explain
why the actors appeared to be moving around normally in 0 g. Certainly
we've all seen enough TV from the shuttle to know that people
do not move and appear the same in 0 g as they do in 1 g, no matter
how well their feet are anchored. This was one of the more inexcusable
screw-ups by Mr. Hyames, part of the overall sloppiness and
TV-series quality which pervade the film.

Pat Clancy, Tektronix
{ucbvax,decvax,ihnp4,allegra,uw-beaver,hplabs}!tektronix!tekecs!patcl

js2j@mhuxt.UUCP (sonntag) (12/17/84)

> One or two people have stated that velcro on the shoes would explain
> why the actors appeared to be moving around normally in 0 g. Certainly
> we've all seen enough TV from the shuttle to know that people
> do not move and appear the same in 0 g as they do in 1 g, no matter
> how well their feet are anchored. This was one of the more inexcusable
> screw-ups by Mr. Hyames, part of the overall sloppiness and
> TV-series quality which pervade the film.

I'm sure they had a big budget for this movie, but it would probably have
to be a lot bigger in order to make it look as though people were moving
in zero g.  But if they had enough money, they could have moved the whold
production into space to avoid this inexcusable sloppiness.  They could
also try shooting very short sequences in some kind of free-fall elevator
(like at some amusement parks).
   These are the only ways offhand I can think of to make it look as though
people are moving in zero g.  Both of them sound ridiculously expensive.
   Maybe we'll just have to live with things like that for awhile longer
until some special effects genius invents artificial gravity.

Jeff Sonntag
ihnp4!mhuxt!js2j

"I've got it!  We'll build the set under a 500' diameter sphere of neutronium!
Let's see ... Neutronium   $5000/ounce ....  forget it."

patcl@tekecs.UUCP (12/19/84)

>I'm sure they had a big budget for this movie, but it would probably have
>to be a lot bigger in order to make it look as though people were moving
>in zero g...
>Maybe we'll just have to live with things like that for awhile longer
>until some special effects genius invents artificial gravity.


Actually, it was done quite well in 2001 (shuttle to space station)
within a presumably reasonable budget.

Pat Clancy, Tektronix
{ucbvax,decvax,ihnp4,allegra,uw-beaver,hplabs}!tektronix!tekecs!patcl

barry@ames.UUCP (Kenn Barry) (12/19/84)

[]

>I'm sure they had a big budget for this movie, but it would probably have
>to be a lot bigger in order to make it look as though people were moving
>in zero g.  But if they had enough money, they could have moved the whold
>production into space to avoid this inexcusable sloppiness.  They could
>also try shooting very short sequences in some kind of free-fall elevator
>(like at some amusement parks).
>   These are the only ways offhand I can think of to make it look as though
>people are moving in zero g.  Both of them sound ridiculously expensive.
>   Maybe we'll just have to live with things like that for awhile longer
>until some special effects genius invents artificial gravity.

	Disagree. If you look at the free-fall scenes in 2001, you will
see that, while the simulation isn't *perfect*, it is done far better
than in 2010. In 2001, when the people are supposed to be walking in
free-fall on velcro, they move *slowly* (keeping momentum down), and
use handholds at every opportunity. In 2010, however, walking in free
fall with sticky soles is made to look exactly like walking in a 1-G
environment. Hyams could have and should have done better.
	Incidentally, I liked 2010. It was not a classic, and had more
technical errors than I can completely excuse, but I thought it a good,
straight SF story that was treated with respect. I'd expected less, and
was surprised by the quality. 2010 is not in the same league as 2001,
but that's true of the books, as well. 2010 is among the weakest of Clarke's
recent novels, in my opinion.

-  From the Crow's Nest  -                      Kenn Barry
                                                NASA-Ames Research Center
                                                Moffett Field, CA
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bsa@ncoast.UUCP (Brandon Allbery) (12/23/84)

[ Ding, dong, the glitch is dead... ]

> Article <4227@tekecs.UUCP>, from patcl@tekecs.UUCP (Pat Clancy)
+----------------
| The marshmellow analogy should perhaps have included an explanation.
| The thing that ruined it for me was the trail of smoke left by the
| Leonov's passage through Jupitor atmosphere. Smoke is particulate
| matter which results from a chemical combustion process; ie.,
| something's burning up. The only thing that could have been burning
| in this case was the balloon, but it seemed to (and had to) survive
| intact.  Certainly the heating of the hydrogen/helium atmosphere would
| not have produced smoke. The space shuttle doesn't produce
| a smoke trail when it reenters, even in an oxygen atmosphere.

Ah, but who knows (Dave Bowman or his masters, and who else?) what's in
the Jovian atmosphere?  Perhaps there's free oxygen enough, or more likely
something that reacted due to the heat to produce particulate matter,
without combustion; a coagulation process?  Don't reply unless you've
a detailed analysis of the upper Jovian atmosphere to back up your views.

--bsa
-- 
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