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Just saw "Contact"
Posted: 24.03.2006, 13:34
by Lothar_GR
What a great movie. I guess i will buy the book also.
One line from the movie stuck to my mind. Someone asks Dr.Arroway what would ask a "Vegan" if she could make to him just one question. She replies that she would ask him how they manage to evolve and how they passed their technological immaturity without destroying themselves
What would you ask? Would you ask the same?
Posted: 24.03.2006, 23:46
by Don. Edwards
Get the book if you can. It was much better. The book and the movie diverge in many places. The book has a totally better ending and leaves things wide open and not closed like the movie. I have a hard cover version of the book and will never let it go. Carl Sagan was a great author.
Don. Edwards
Posted: 25.03.2006, 01:02
by buggs_moran
I totally concur with Mr. Edwards. I also have a hardcopy of the book and enjoyed it far more than the movie. You should read his nonfiction books as well. I immensely enjoyed "Cosmos", "Billions and Billions" and "Pale Blue Dot". Lothar, if you can get your hand on a copy of the PBS series "Cosmos", you should. The special effects aren't modern but the message is dead on to this day. I watched it as a teenager and was never the same. As Carl says
If you know a thing only qualitatively (aesthetically), you know it no more than vaguely. If you know it quantitatively, grasping some numerical measure that distinguishes it from an infinite number of other possibilities, you are beginning to know it deeply. You comprehend some of its beauty and you gain access to its power and the understanding it provides.
Posted: 25.03.2006, 05:18
by Malenfant
What would I ask?
"Can you take me with you?"
Posted: 25.03.2006, 06:07
by Dollan
What would I ask?
"Why so cryptic? Take a few more decades, learn our language and cultures as best you can, and send us something that's straight forward, like 'This equation equals wormhole technology' or something!"
...John, always over-simplistic...
Posted: 25.03.2006, 18:55
by PlutonianEmpire
Ah, I love that movie. In fact, it is what inspired me to make a system around Vega in Celestia, but I'm currently in my OFF mode, so I guess I'll wait a few more months before completing it.
lol.
Posted: 25.03.2006, 20:21
by Hunter Parasite
buggs_moran wrote:I totally concur with Mr. Edwards. I also have a hardcopy of the book and enjoyed it far more than the movie. You should read his nonfiction books as well. I immensely enjoyed "Cosmos", "Billions and Billions" and "Pale Blue Dot". Lothar, if you can get your hand on a copy of the PBS series "Cosmos", you should. The special effects aren't modern but the message is dead on to this day. I watched it as a teenager and was never the same. As Carl says
If you know a thing only qualitatively (aesthetically), you know it no more than vaguely. If you know it quantitatively, grasping some numerical measure that distinguishes it from an infinite number of other possibilities, you are beginning to know it deeply. You comprehend some of its beauty and you gain access to its power and the understanding it provides.
I have cosmos aswell, do you have Atlas of the sky too?
Posted: 25.03.2006, 20:46
by buggs_moran
Hunter Parasite wrote:I have cosmos aswell, do you have Atlas of the sky too?
Actually this is first I've heard of it. I did a little digging on the web and might get it for my classroom since it looks geared to first year Astronomy.
Thanks Hunter.
Posted: 07.05.2006, 05:28
by jgrillo2002
Posted: 07.05.2006, 06:10
by Malenfant
Oh that looks spiffy. An animation would look very cool. I loved the part where it blew up in the movie too, when the spinning rings just go completely crazy as they lose cohesion and fly around all over the place...
Posted: 07.05.2006, 07:02
by jgrillo2002
heh. that terrorst is too much of a religous zealot
Posted: 07.05.2006, 13:54
by Dollan
jgrillo2002 wrote:heh. that terrorst is too much of a religous zealot
Being the son of Gary Busey, I'm not surprised that he was tearing things up!
...John...