The previews we've seen looked just awful. On Monday, March 31, 2014 9:01 PM, Wiggins Patrick <paw@getbeehive.net> wrote: Considering how big some of them looked they must have been very close. :) Actually with the dense jungle and cloud cover the place reminded me of the home of the Star Wars rebel base. patrick On 31 Mar 2014, at 20:50, Dion Davidson <diondavidson@yahoo.com> wrote:
What did you think of the daytime stars? Could we rig it here on earth, maybe with some reverse terraforming of the atmosphere? I wonder if some of the other planets we have discovered could have daytime skies like that. I really liked the "build a universe in 60 seconds" scenes. Reminded me of the cosmic calendar on Cosmos. Dion
On Monday, March 31, 2014 8:06 PM, Wiggins Patrick <paw@getbeehive.net> wrote:
Just got out of the movie.
Maybe not the most depressing flick I've seen but close.
Speaking of Star Wars, was the creature the bad guy on the boat was eating one of those seen in the Tatooine Mos Eisley bar scene in Star Wars? Sure looked like it.
patrick
On 31 Mar 2014, at 15:17, Josephine Grahn <jograhn@gmail.com> wrote:
"Noah" is not a science-based story.... And movie creators rarely let science get in the way of a good visual... (Or audio, remember how noisy the space ships were in Star Wars?)
On Mar 31, 2014, at 2:40 PM, Dion Davidson <diondavidson@yahoo.com> wrote:
I liked the movie. I also like the daytime sky in the pre-flood version of Earth, where stars are visible during the day. What would be the scientific reasons for such a thing: * earth much closer to other bright stars, so their light is visible during the day?
* different composition of the atmosphere? * dimmer sun? I liked the effect. Dion
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