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etalian posted:Even the staff admit the later seasons went haywire from the original message due to thing such as the writers strike and also how Moore didn't have a long term roadmap for the plots. Does the later seasons mean 3 and 4? Because there were only 4...
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# ? Dec 6, 2015 02:27 |
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# ? Jun 8, 2024 09:17 |
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Cheston posted:I only intermittently watched BSG when it first aired. Is there a good stopping point anywhere between Season 1 and, er, when it becomes clear they don't have a plan? Season 3 episode "Exodus Part 2" is the end of the show being consistently good, and it's a fine series finale of sorts. There are superb episodes after that but no real consistency.
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# ? Dec 6, 2015 02:50 |
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General Battuta posted:Season 3 episode "Exodus Part 2" is the end of the show being consistently good, and it's a fine series finale of sorts. There are superb episodes after that but no real consistency. Sounds good, thanks! I'll go up to that point, and then maybe finish S3.
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# ? Dec 6, 2015 07:20 |
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Strategic Tea posted:The way it works in the show, though, is they just fill the whole space between the ship and the enemy with an impenetrable wall of flak. So it's not just a firing solution but a solution to (enemy) firing It's been ages since I've watched any BSG, but I'm pretty sure Galactica was actually shooting at Basestars in any given fight too. The flak was just its own separate thing for point defense. Nevermind the idea that flak is a pretty horrifying concept for space warfare. Cheston posted:Sounds good, thanks! I'll go up to that point, and then maybe finish S3. I'd recommend watching "Collaborators" (the episode immediately following the "Exodus" two-parter) at the very least, since it's kind of an epilogue to the previous arc. But yeah, the show goes off the rails in the worst possible way. Honestly, I think it stopped being consistently good sometime after the whole Pegasus arc in season 2, in part because there's just so much filler in the back half of that season.
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# ? Dec 6, 2015 07:59 |
General Battuta posted:Season 3 episode "Exodus Part 2" is the end of the show being consistently good, and it's a fine series finale of sorts. There are superb episodes after that but no real consistency. Yeah, this is basically what I was about to say. There are still some episodes in Season 3 that are really good and, in all honesty, I'd recommend watching the whole season. It's Season 4 that really begins to nosedive. Season 3, though, is when the cracks begin to show. Paradoxish posted:It's been ages since I've watched any BSG, but I'm pretty sure Galactica was actually shooting at Basestars in any given fight too. The flak was just its own separate thing for point defense. Nevermind the idea that flak is a pretty horrifying concept for space warfare. Nah. Season 2 has some weird episodes that suffer from an over use of disjointed time sequencing or weird retcons (Lee in Black Market) but the individual episodes are still really cool.
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# ? Dec 6, 2015 08:10 |
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I didn't even make it to the end of s3 Like I enjoyed all the flawed characters and so on but then I realised I was 2.5 seasons in and nobody had changed or learned a thing. And whenever the show seemed about to suggest that maybe they should have, it just turned around and went 'GOD BLESS ARE TROOPS DOING THE BEST THEY CAN'
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# ? Dec 6, 2015 13:10 |
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If someone could just put together a supercut of all the fleet battle and dogfighting scenes, that would be good enough for me. Also, I'm sorry that you didn't enjoy the end of the book, Professor Shark. That's always disappointing from both sides of a book recommendation Hopefully the writing in the show will have less pacing issues for you?
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# ? Dec 6, 2015 18:06 |
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32MB OF ESRAM posted:This was cool. All the ship sets are nuts, they look really well done. I read an early review that said this wan't very good but that was incorrect. Also I like the haircuts. They all look like sci-fi Macklemore but I suspect they're also really useful for the fake zero G scenes, since nobody's got a lot of hair to fly around wildly. GigaPeon posted:Ah. Must have just had "Jayne Cobb knockoff". stuck in my brain this whole time. etalian posted:it's tech noir not neo noir coyo7e fucked around with this message at 18:44 on Dec 6, 2015 |
# ? Dec 6, 2015 18:32 |
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KatWithHands posted:If you like reading different kinds of space battles, there's this series called The Lost Fleet that Amazon recommended to me because of The Expanse. I checked out the first book, Dauntless, and the space battles and communications and everything were pretty neat. There was FTL jumping and the ships were slightly more maneuverable, but a lot of the same ideas applying. A lot of thought going into relativity and plotting attack patterns and stuff. In The Expanse, it's usually the POV of one ship against one or two others, but in this one, it's about the difficulties in directing an entire fleet while taking into account the time lapse between speed-of-light communications across broad stretches of space. So kind of like how there's time between the missiles launching, and them actually hitting the Canterbury, there would be scenes where they're watching a fight in a different position in the system, knowing full well that the fight they're watching has already happened, it just took a few minutes for the footage/information to reach them. Nothing much about the characterization or the story in the first novel was really memorable, but the battles were really interesting to imagine. Then we have how many times he describes the time delay inherent in weaponry and communication in space, in each book.. I mean he literally will talk about the same thing three times during EVERY combat scene. You end up hearing about these time delays probably 6-8 or more times in each book. It is a terrible series, read one book, consider yourself having learned all there is to be gained, and never touch them again.
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# ? Dec 6, 2015 18:51 |
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coyo7e posted:I dug it a lot, I liked the zero-g scenes as well for the most part, although the bit with the CGI birds was pretty awful. I am not sold on Holden yet, he doesn't seem immature/idealistic enough, yet. And I haven't seen enough of the pilot, isn't he supposed to have a texas drawl? I liked that you can see the coriolis effect when Miller pours water for the hooker on Ceres. If they can keep up the small touches like that, it'll go a long way towards keeping it more "hard" scifi.
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# ? Dec 6, 2015 19:00 |
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I think my biggest complaint is that I always envisioned most of the crew as older and less attractive. Holden in my mind was like one of those dorky mid-40s ex-Navy dudes you'd meet in college, with terribad mustaches, who were just sort of milking the GI Bill in perpetuity so they could table a D&D game and wallpaper their dorm room with anime posters for years at a stretch. Amos was huge and bald, like a neo nazi trucker who'd spent a lot of time lifting weights in prison. The cop dude was a paunchy near-retirement-age dude, probably in full late stage male pattern baldness - which accounted for his awful choice in hats.
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# ? Dec 6, 2015 19:04 |
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Paradoxish posted:It's been ages since I've watched any BSG, but I'm pretty sure Galactica was actually shooting at Basestars in any given fight too. The flak was just its own separate thing for point defense. Nevermind the idea that flak is a pretty horrifying concept for space warfare. Yep. The firing solution lines were always for battlestar vs basestar combat. The odd part were that vipers didn't even carry shipkillers and we're just there for space superiority. Between the flak and vipers hold off the raiders while the battlestar main guns and missiles took out the basestar. Which given the armor difference was a pretty good tactic.
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# ? Dec 6, 2015 19:23 |
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Professor Shark posted:I'm halfway through the first novel, it isn't all that well written, but I've been reading Raymond Chandler almost exclusively for the last year so maybe it's just different. You really missed out by not getting the audiobook. It's one of the rare cases where the audiobook is much much better than the regular book. Jefferson Mays does a hell of a job.
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# ? Dec 6, 2015 21:49 |
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coyo7e posted:I like this phrasing, it does remind me of Bladerunner. It was originally created as a sort of visual joke in the first Terminator. Director James Cameron described it as merging futuristic science fiction with more traditional film noir elements and visuals.
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# ? Dec 6, 2015 22:06 |
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xsf421 posted:I liked that you can see the coriolis effect when Miller pours water for the hooker on Ceres. If they can keep up the small touches like that, it'll go a long way towards keeping it more "hard" scifi. I missed that. Guess I have to watch again.
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# ? Dec 6, 2015 22:20 |
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Hughlander posted:Yep. The firing solution lines were always for battlestar vs basestar combat. The odd part were that vipers didn't even carry shipkillers and we're just there for space superiority. Between the flak and vipers hold off the raiders while the battlestar main guns and missiles took out the basestar. Which given the armor difference was a pretty good tactic. They do use Vipers or Raptors (I can't remember) for anti-ship nuclear attacks later in the series.
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# ? Dec 6, 2015 22:32 |
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coyo7e posted:It is a terrible series, read one book, consider yourself having learned all there is to be gained, and never touch them again. Wow, done and done. I was wondering how he'd fill even one other book having already gone through the lengthy descriptions in the first, let alone an entire series. That's pretty bad. I was recommended Leviathan Wakes by Amazon, so I was hoping it would've hit gold again. Bert Roberge posted:You really missed out by not getting the audiobook. It's one of the rare cases where the audiobook is much much better than the regular book. Oh poo poo, that guy! Okay, first you had my curiosity, now you have my attention. I'm going to have to buy the whole series over again, aren't I?
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# ? Dec 6, 2015 22:34 |
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If you squint you can see an ad for The Book of Mormon Fun little easter egg. KatWithHands posted:Oh poo poo, that guy! Okay, first you had my curiosity, now you have my attention. I'm going to have to buy the whole series over again, aren't I? He does great narration for all the books except 4, which has a different and terrible narrator so you can skip that one.
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# ? Dec 6, 2015 22:40 |
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Why are they spending a lot of money to put on the screen some book I've never heard of, while ignoring the best space opera ever made, the Culture series. Yes, my autism is flaring up. If tv executives are reading this I've got this idea to turn The Player of Games into a miniseries, the 3 acts of the book becoming 3 90 minute episodes. Gurgeh would be played by, you guessed it, Idris Elba. Yes, I'm available for hire as The Ideas Guy. That said I've watched the pilot of this thing and, while not terribly impressed, I'll keep watching as I haven't seen any space SF in years. I just hope it won't turn into some libertarian crap (I've been triggered by a character unironically wearing a fedora), otherwise even if it's not very good I'll still watch as it seems to have decent production values and I'm a sucker for cool looking space poo poo.
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# ? Dec 6, 2015 22:56 |
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3peat posted:Why are they spending a lot of money to put on the screen some book I've never heard of, while ignoring the best space opera ever made, the Culture series. Yes, my autism is flaring up. If tv executives are reading this I've got this idea to turn The Player of Games into a miniseries, the 3 acts of the book becoming 3 90 minute episodes. Gurgeh would be played by, you guessed it, Idris Elba. Yes, I'm available for hire as The Ideas Guy. Triggered by a fedora, I think the future is not for you.
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# ? Dec 6, 2015 23:00 |
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3peat posted:Why are they spending a lot of money to put on the screen some book I've never heard of, while ignoring the best space opera ever made, the Culture series. I ask myself this question almost every single month. The Culture is so loving good and is ripe for a miniseries or television series that takes place in its universe. Hell, Consider Phlebas and The Player of Games are ready loving made for television and have perfect three-act structures baked into them already.
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# ? Dec 6, 2015 23:13 |
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3peat posted:Why are they spending a lot of money to put on the screen some book I've never heard of, while ignoring the best space opera ever made, the Culture series. Yes, my autism is flaring up. If tv executives are reading this I've got this idea to turn The Player of Games into a miniseries, the 3 acts of the book becoming 3 90 minute episodes. Gurgeh would be played by, you guessed it, Idris Elba. Yes, I'm available for hire as The Ideas Guy. reply: He is wearing it ironically though because there's no rain or sun there. It's just a big 'gently caress you OPA I work for Earth' as well as a nod to old noir movies. On top of that he's a big MRA creep to his coworker at the bar so it works on many levels. Bert Roberge fucked around with this message at 23:40 on Dec 6, 2015 |
# ? Dec 6, 2015 23:13 |
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Noir detectives are (the only people) allowed to wear fedoras/trilbies/whatever
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# ? Dec 7, 2015 00:08 |
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Grognan posted:Triggered by a fedora, I think the future is not for you. I have a bad history of trying to read sci fi books and being hit by idiot writers blatantly pushing their retarded ideology on me (most recently Vernor Vinge masturbating over the saintly perfection of the Free Market or Peter f Hamilton with the UKIP crap) so I'm wary of any new stuff. I meant by that post that I'll keep on watching unless it turns into libertarian poo poo, sorry for the confusion Vanderdeath posted:I ask myself this question almost every single month. The Culture is so loving good and is ripe for a miniseries or television series that takes place in its universe. Hell, Consider Phlebas and The Player of Games are ready loving made for television and have perfect three-act structures baked into them already. Most of the Culture books would work on TV imo, the exceptions would be Excession which, while my favorite, wouldn't really work as the main characters are ship Minds and I don't know how you'd portray their interactions and make it good tv (it's a shame, as that book has the coolest space battles/space setpieces out of all sci fi I've read and The Affront are amazing villains). Also Look to Windward, you'd have to change the Chelgrians to something more human looking as I don't think people would take seriously some feline predators with 5 limbs
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# ? Dec 7, 2015 00:21 |
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3peat posted:I have a bad history of trying to read sci fi books and being hit by idiot writers blatantly pushing their retarded ideology on me (most recently Vernor Vinge masturbating over the saintly perfection of the Free Market or Peter f Hamilton with the UKIP crap) so I'm wary of any new stuff. I meant by that post that I'll keep on watching unless it turns into libertarian poo poo, sorry for the confusion. There's no really weird ideology that gets pushed on you in this series but it is anti-war and pro-transparency for governments and corporations.
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# ? Dec 7, 2015 00:53 |
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Strategic Tea posted:Noir detectives are (the only people) allowed to wear fedoras/trilbies/whatever And black guys.
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# ? Dec 7, 2015 03:11 |
coyo7e posted:I think my biggest complaint is that I always envisioned most of the crew as older and less attractive. Holden in my mind was like one of those dorky mid-40s ex-Navy dudes you'd meet in college, with terribad mustaches, who were just sort of milking the GI Bill in perpetuity so they could table a D&D game and wallpaper their dorm room with anime posters for years at a stretch. Amos was huge and bald, like a neo nazi trucker who'd spent a lot of time lifting weights in prison. The cop dude was a paunchy near-retirement-age dude, probably in full late stage male pattern baldness - which accounted for his awful choice in hats. Holden's consistently described as being very attractive though. Amos looks mild and unthreatening, Holden has classic good looks, Miller is aging and grey like any good washed up PI.
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# ? Dec 7, 2015 16:52 |
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coyo7e posted:It seems like a lot of posters forget that Amos has probably the hardest background of any character, and his amiable demeanor masks the fact that he probably killed someone over scraps of food in a dumpster, as a kid. Lots of times. He doesn't want to remember that or go back to it, but unless he's actually carrying his shotgun at the time, he doesn't go out of his way to intimidate people that often that I recall. When he's armed, he does it constantly though, from what I do remember. He explains that he was forced into prostitution as a child. Getting out and protecting other vulnerable children from the same abuse, with extreme prejudice. That's the kind of thing that produces Borderline Personality Disorder. Which is what I read his personality to be.
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# ? Dec 7, 2015 17:10 |
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It took them until book 5 (a really long time) to make Holden's crew compelling and fleshed-out people, but I think they did a decent job in the end. Nemesis Games is a really good book.
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# ? Dec 7, 2015 18:26 |
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General Battuta posted:It took them until book 5 (a really long time) to make Holden's crew compelling and fleshed-out people, but I think they did a decent job in the end. Nemesis Games is a really good book. I was pretty irritated at the format of Nemesis Games at first. Then I realized I was getting a more in depth look at each of the crew members than I had in the previous 4 book, and I loved it.
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# ? Dec 7, 2015 20:13 |
flosofl posted:I was pretty irritated at the format of Nemesis Games at first. Then I realized I was getting a more in depth look at each of the crew members than I had in the previous 4 book, and I loved it. That and Holden was in it the least of all five books to date, which is a great bonus.
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# ? Dec 7, 2015 20:57 |
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3peat posted:
I love the Culture novels but I really think adapting them could be kind of tricky. So much of it deals with things like drug glands or perceptions of Minds vs Meat that would be hard to film or the entirely different moral standards the Culture has in their day to day existence you'd end up with an NC-17 rating just for nudity. I really would like to see some professional renderings of Orbitals and Ships and Idirans tho.
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# ? Dec 7, 2015 22:15 |
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Ill be happy with Hyperion and Rama miniseries
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# ? Dec 7, 2015 22:18 |
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Hyperion is being worked on. What about Rama? I thought that's still stuck in development hell?
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# ? Dec 7, 2015 22:28 |
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I heard a "rain" refrain in the pilot, but when do we get our first "doors and corners"? Can't wait
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# ? Dec 8, 2015 01:09 |
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Longbaugh01 posted:I heard a "rain" refrain in the pilot, but when do we get our first "doors and corners"? I can't wait for "Drop some rocks!" To become a meme.
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# ? Dec 8, 2015 01:12 |
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Combat Pretzel posted:Hyperion is being worked on. What about Rama? I thought that's still stuck in development hell?
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# ? Dec 8, 2015 01:21 |
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Rocksicles posted:And black guys. Black guys over 40 or that play the blues. There's stricter rules than you might think.
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# ? Dec 8, 2015 01:26 |
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gohmak posted:Altered Carbon anyone? Takashi Kovacs movies/series? gently caress yes.
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# ? Dec 8, 2015 01:29 |
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# ? Jun 8, 2024 09:17 |
flosofl posted:Takashi Kovacs movies/series? gently caress yes. Very much yes. But not sure how easy it would be to show the same consciousness popping up in multiple bodies. Would take some serious acting chops to do that justice.
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# ? Dec 8, 2015 10:13 |