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"Bill Steele" wrote in message
... [re the first Reeve movie] ... I don't believe it was ever specified that Krypton was outside our own [galaxy]... Phantom Stranger has since posted some more direct evidence of Krypton being in another galaxy (Jor-El dialogue), and I'm still very vaguely remembering a reference by Superman to Lois, perhaps in the rooftop interview scene with them. At the beginning of Smallville season 5, Clark also tells Chloe Sullivan that Krypton is in another galaxy, though he has no personal knowledge of that. With the series ongoing it could be retconned that he didn't know the exact story (see a possibility later). In any case the first Reeve movie does seems to have started the intergalactic ball rolling in Superman, and not in a good way IMO. Adding to your point about our ability to detect planets, I also recall reading that NASA has plans for a large space telescope to be placed further out in our solar system, which would have the ability to visually detect Earth-size planets circling close enough stars. In any event that's why I wrote "the idea that astronomers would detect much of anything in terms of planetary debris becomes *even_more* ludicrous". "Even more" in the sense that, as you noted, the existing ability in this area is limited even for close systems in our own galaxy, without taking it to another. It's at least plausible though, in a near-future context, to detect major debris from a rocky planet breakup around a closer star. *My* nitpick is that if Krypton posesses the knowledge of many galaxies it means interstellar travel is common- place to them... There are nitpicks like that, but they don't get so much to the science as the technology part of it. Perhaps Krypton was just xenophobic for example, and very tightly controlled technology and space travel before the end came. Then Jor-El was the only one who could get his son out in time. There was another poster who responded on ramcf to your post, saying the many-Kryptonian-space-travelers premise in your nitpick was part of Smallville. To expand on that for those not familiar with the series (and I'll bring it back to the astronomy theme as well), there are no organic Kryptonian survivors except for Clark. There have been technology-based "transferences" of sorts where people have been possessed or embodied, and artificial intelligence avatars, and the Phantom Zone has also been introduced. There are also legends and some evidence of Kryptonian visits to Earth prior to Krypton's demise. Slowly getting back to the astronomy angle, and in light of the intergalactic element that's unnecessary, I'm not at all opposed to different incarnations of the story doing their own versions of this. One way of looking at the premise of Smallville -- and I think it's an element that helps give it a potential for greatness -- is that everything is condensed ("Small" -- get it?). Lex Luthor is there from day 1, and Metropolis is just over yonder from Smallville, and the various threats and future threats that Clark faces, in terms of his Kryptonian heritage and other villains, show up before he reaches his teens. (The three main younger characters, Clark, Lana and Chloe all only turn 20 in this upcoming season 6). There's also the twist of Chloe Sullivan having been there from episode 1 and now being the Daily Planet reporter character. She's already had a front page byline at the age of 19, and used her cousin Lois Lane as a pen name for a Planet story she handed in in season 3, while her cousin played by Erica Durance (who showed up in season 4) has yet to show an interest in journalism. How to continue the "everything condensed" theme? During that "Krypton is a comet" discussion, it occurred to me that all the things the show has hinted at could be explained by Krypton literally being local. This can be made plausible if it were a large rocky planet with an atmosphere between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter, where the asteroid belt is now. Yes, it would have been cold but there's the Ice Planet nature of Krypton that's already been established in the Reeve series (and has also had a Chloe quip about that in episode 5 "Cool"). Advanced technology could have provided a power source from the planet's core. Things go awry, planet breaks up, and this could be written to have happened far enough back to address the "Chinese astronomers should have detected or recorded it" nitpick. Then add the already-established-in-the-Superman-mythos long trajectory and suspended animation to explain why Clark didn't arrive until later, along with a meteor shower that is tougher to make work on an intergalactic scale (you have to have the meteors caught in the ship's warp field and taken along for the ride). It would explain why Earth was always of interest to Kryptonians, including archaeological evidence around the world that is part of Smallville canon. I'll also assert (until someone proves me wrong!) that it's impenetrable in terms of nitpicks as I've described it. I think it'd be an interesting and very suitable twist on the story that perfectly fits the "Small"-ville premise. (Interesting anecdote that I ran across within the past week or two, from an interview that was done with the Superman Returns actor Brandon Routh. It was done at the time they'd started shooting but presumably part of the deal was not to publish many of those interviews until the movie's release. Anyway, he may have been told not mention it after that because the presence of Smallville has always been a bit of a minefield for the movie and vice versa. It turns out Routh auditioned for the Clark Kent role in Smallville and received a callback, before it ultimately went to Welling. I think it worked out for the best and Smallville at least retains a shot at Best Incarnation Ever at this point, including perhaps its own movie series after the TV run). |
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On Mon, 3 Jul 2006 14:23:56 -0400, "KalElFan"
wrote: Phantom Stranger has since posted some more direct evidence of Krypton being in another galaxy (Jor-El dialogue), and I'm still very vaguely remembering a reference by Superman to Lois, perhaps in the rooftop interview scene with them. At the beginning of Smallville season 5, Clark also tells Chloe Sullivan that Krypton is in another galaxy, though he has no personal knowledge of that. With the series ongoing it could be retconned that he didn't know the exact story (see a possibility later). In any case the first Reeve movie does seems to have started the intergalactic ball rolling in Superman, and not in a good way IMO. I don't think so, and never did. Few in the audience of SR could tell you what a galaxy is, which is the nearest to us, which one we live in, etc. Often, when someone says galaxy he *means* solar system, and someone here includes all the actors and characters in all the Superman movies. It could be claimed quite rightly that if a character says galaxy it's reasonable to assume he means galaxy. But, believing he really means solar system creates few problems with continuity and solves many. |
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![]() George Peatty wrote: On Mon, 3 Jul 2006 14:23:56 -0400, "KalElFan" wrote: Phantom Stranger has since posted some more direct evidence of Krypton being in another galaxy (Jor-El dialogue), and I'm still very vaguely remembering a reference by Superman to Lois, perhaps in the rooftop interview scene with them. At the beginning of Smallville season 5, Clark also tells Chloe Sullivan that Krypton is in another galaxy, though he has no personal knowledge of that. With the series ongoing it could be retconned that he didn't know the exact story (see a possibility later). In any case the first Reeve movie does seems to have started the intergalactic ball rolling in Superman, and not in a good way IMO. I don't think so, and never did. Few in the audience of SR could tell you what a galaxy is, which is the nearest to us, which one we live in, etc. Often, when someone says galaxy he *means* solar system, and someone here includes all the actors and characters in all the Superman movies. It could be claimed quite rightly that if a character says galaxy it's reasonable to assume he means galaxy. But, believing he really means solar system creates few problems with continuity and solves many. I'm going to pretend that you didn't say that, just for my own sanity. I mean, seriously, are we really going to let major lapses go because we know that somewhere out there some idiot doesn't know his ass from his elbow? Just because there are morons who cheerfully go on Jaywalking to display their ignorance doesn't mean we should allow filmmakers to get away with putting retarded **** in their movies. Doug |
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In article ,
"KalElFan" wrote: Phantom Stranger has since posted some more direct evidence of Krypton being in another galaxy (Jor-El dialogue), and I'm still very vaguely remembering a reference by Superman to Lois, perhaps in the rooftop interview scene with them. At the beginning of Smallville season 5, Clark also tells Chloe Sullivan that Krypton is in another galaxy, though he has no personal knowledge of that. With the series ongoing it could be retconned that he didn't know the exact story (see a possibility later). In Clark's meeting with Swann there is some looking at star maps, pointing out where Krypton was and now isn't. That places Krypton in our galaxy and outside our solar system. at least in the Smallverse. |
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"Bill Steele" wrote in message
... [re the Swann episode "Rosetta"] That places Krypton in our galaxy and outside our solar system. at least in the Smallverse. Nope, not based on that scene, which I just checked. (For anyone aware of my vow not to buy the DVDs before the series had played out, a later post on r.a.sf.s will explain why I have access to them right now and the project I've been working on with them. :-)) It MAY be as you say, but it could equally be in another galaxy or work as the Krypton- is-local twist on it. In fact I think it supports the latter as much as anything. First thing about that scene is that the messages that he received were on the day of the original meteor shower. If our objective here is to make that work (I concede that the show did not think it through like this), one has to ask why a normal signal traveling at light speed would arrive from another solar system within our own galaxy, or from another galaxy, at the same time as a ship from the same source. Try it, but for now I'll assert that there is no explanation for that that is nitpick-proof, in fact it crumbles as science or reasonable pseudo-science. If it were a repeating signal for thousands or millions of years (depending whether Krypton is intra or extra- galactic), it'd be a massive coincidence that Swann just happened to discover the signal for the first time on the same day as the ship arrives. Much more likely, the messages were rigged by the advanced technology behind them, to arrive at the same time. Could be a signal beacon left along the way and timed to activate as the meteor shower and the ship arrived, or perhaps even left on the outskirts of our solar system after it dropped out of warp (or not, if Krypton was local and no warp speed is involved). In effect, Swann's star charts were displaying the area of the sky the signals came from, but he has no idea how far away those were. In fact he says he tried to follow the signals "billions and billions of miles" into space and found nothing, and the star chart marks the "W-5" area the signals came from, with a large galaxy depicted to its right and a nebula below, two objects that are very different (one outside our galaxy, one within it). Moreover, "billions" of miles is actually a scale WITHIN our solar system. It's over 23 TRILLION miles to the nearest star. Swann was a mysterious character and may not have been telling all he knows (Reeve played the role in one more episode the following season, before he passed away). Krypton could be in our galaxy or in another galaxy based on what he said, but a much better fit for it is that the signal, at least, came from within our solar system, which is what he apparently confined his search to. Another perspective is the Kawatche legends from 500 years ago that Smallville has had a few episodes on, and that resulted in the cave drawings. The earliest peoples in the Americas are said to have crossed over from Asia 10,000+ years ago, so the fictional Kawatche in what's now middle America could have had legends passed down from the required era, before the recording of any astronomical observations. There are also other aspects of the legend that could be explained in other ways, but the key thing is that they spoke of a star in a specific area of the heavens that was there and then GONE, which supports a local planet only. A planet wouldn't appear as a star if it were in another solar system, only the star would. It could be a supernova WITHIN our galaxy, but the nitpick there being it would not just disappear. It would brighten enormously and fry the Earth with radiation if it were close enough, and it would leave detectable remnants including a nebula with a pulsar (neutron star) within that. Yes, let's concede again they never thought it through like this. I'm just sayin'. :-) In the Smallville version of the story, Krypton was local. There's a certain elegance to that, it explains many other things in the story, and it's nitpick-proof as I've described it. A few lines of dialogue in a few episodes could reflect the "What??? That's incredible!" doubting of it, Then the basics of what, where, when and why it happened are revealed, in the local context, and all the archaeological evidence and interest in Earth and so on make perfect sense. Just for the Smallverse though, a special part of the Superman Multiverse. :-) |
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"trike" wrote in message
oups.com... [responding to George Peatty's post] I mean, seriously, are we really going to let major lapses go because we know that somewhere out there some idiot doesn't know his ass from his elbow? ... Well, George was right that not many catch it. As for his "assume they mean solar system" point, we can assume that either way. Even in the other galaxy, one interprets it that Krypton orbited a star, i.e. it was in a solar system in that other galaxy. But saying we should assume "galaxy" means another word isn't really a solution, it's just acknowledging the nitpick is valid. "Galaxy" takes it to a scale they don't need and it makes the concept of seeing planetary debris completely ridiculous. If you know what a galaxy is and understand the scale involved, it can wrench you out of the movie a bit and have you thinking about the mistake. Yeah, it's maybe only a percent or two of the people watching who notice this kind of thing, if that, but they tend to be the more science literate and worth a change of word or two to get it right. Just a few separate typo corrections from my earlier posts. In the last one it should have read that the various threats and so on show up in the Smallville series before Clark LEAVES his teens. Clark, Lana and Chloe are 15 and in first year of high school as the series starts, and in college and turning 20 this upcoming season. In an earlier post I also said the writers had hundreds of millions of stars to play with in our Milky Way galaxy (hence why taking the story intergalactic is unnecessary in addition to causing other problems). In fact the estimate of numbers of stars in our galaxy seems to have bounced around over the past few decades and gets pegged differently depending when and where you run across it. One source I looked at (Funk & Wagnalls Encyclopedia, mid-90s, which Microsoft bought out and used to base Encarta on) had it as high as "one million million", which is to say a trillion stars. The World Almanac 2006 has it at less than half that, specifically 400 billion stars. In any case my "few hundred million" should have read "few hundred billion". It gives you an idea of the enormous scales here even within our galaxy, and why intergalactic stories are somewhat overkill. They ARE NOT "WRONG" though. It's very easy to postulate that an advanced enough civilization could have intergalactic warp capability if they can have interstellar warp capability. Add in another very plausible premise, which is that intelligent life and advanced technological worlds that don't destroy themselves are exceedingly rare in the universe. So Krypton over in Galaxy 9, sufficiently advanced, actually is aware of Earth as one of those rare places, in one of the "28 known galaxies" with intelligent life. The problem only becomes a really tough-to-crack nitpick when you start talking about Earth astronomers peering through their telescopes and seeing Kryptonian debris over in Galaxy 9. One irony here is that, while the nitpick is irrelevant in the sense hardly anyone will notice, it relates to the very premise of the movie that causes it so much trouble from the get-go because of Superman buzzing off to check out debris for 5 years. If the nitpick had been raised and the enormous scales understood, maybe someone might have thought "you know, maybe Superman wouldn't just buzz off and leave for another galaxy to check out debris... I mean doesn't that work against his hero status and ability to relate to him, including for the viewership, and doesn't it kinda torpedo the whole romance element? ..." So I'll echo what trike said that we should press for better knowing-your-scientific-ass-from-your-elbow standards in movies. :-) Maybe it'll help one thing lead to another and it'll catch other correctible screwups as well, ones that have a much bigger effect. |
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![]() "KalElFan" wrote in message ... "Bill Steele" wrote in message ... [re the Swann episode "Rosetta"] That places Krypton in our galaxy and outside our solar system. at least in the Smallverse. Nope, not based on that scene, which I just checked. (For anyone aware of my vow not to buy the DVDs before the series had played out, a later post on r.a.sf.s will explain why I have access to them right now and the project I've been working on with them. :-)) It MAY be as you say, but it could equally be in another galaxy or work as the Krypton- is-local twist on it. In fact I think it supports the latter as much as anything. Although in "Arrival," Clark explicitly tells Chloe: "I wasn't born anywhere near Smallville. In fact I wasn't born anywhere near this galaxy." Agreed that putting Krypton outside the Milky Way is obviously bad science, but there it is. |
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![]() redhawk wrote: "KalElFan" wrote in message ... "Bill Steele" wrote in message ... [re the Swann episode "Rosetta"] That places Krypton in our galaxy and outside our solar system. at least in the Smallverse. Nope, not based on that scene, which I just checked. (For anyone aware of my vow not to buy the DVDs before the series had played out, a later post on r.a.sf.s will explain why I have access to them right now and the project I've been working on with them. :-)) It MAY be as you say, but it could equally be in another galaxy or work as the Krypton- is-local twist on it. In fact I think it supports the latter as much as anything. Although in "Arrival," Clark explicitly tells Chloe: "I wasn't born anywhere near Smallville. In fact I wasn't born anywhere near this galaxy." Agreed that putting Krypton outside the Milky Way is obviously bad science, but there it is. Postscript: looking back through the thread, I see that you already did address this in a previous post. True that Clark was not speaking from personal knowledge, just wish they hadn't gone there in the first place so there would be no need to fix it. |
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In article P01rg.26931$543.7765@trnddc04, redhawk
wrote: "KalElFan" wrote in message ... "Bill Steele" wrote in message ... [re the Swann episode "Rosetta"] That places Krypton in our galaxy and outside our solar system. at least in the Smallverse. Nope, not based on that scene, which I just checked. (For anyone aware of my vow not to buy the DVDs before the series had played out, a later post on r.a.sf.s will explain why I have access to them right now and the project I've been working on with them. :-)) It MAY be as you say, but it could equally be in another galaxy or work as the Krypton- is-local twist on it. In fact I think it supports the latter as much as anything. Although in "Arrival," Clark explicitly tells Chloe: "I wasn't born anywhere near Smallville. In fact I wasn't born anywhere near this galaxy." Agreed that putting Krypton outside the Milky Way is obviously bad science, but there it is. The thing is, even granting the notion that you have a star drive that permits travel over vast distances in a very short time, then the problem isn't whether someone comes from one of the other local galaxies, but why somebody in that other galaxy decided to shoot his kid to Earth -- or how he even found Earth in the first place -- among perhaps trillions of candidate planets. I came across something the other day that said the movie version of Krypton was supposed to be thirty million lightyears from Earth. |
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