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- From: shoham@ll.mit.edu (Daniel Shoham)
- Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf.movies
- Subject: Re: sound in space
- Message-ID: <1992Nov17.004954.13497@ll.mit.edu>
- Date: 17 Nov 92 00:49:54 GMT
- References: <Bxqsp3.MoH@well.sf.ca.us>
- Sender: news@ll.mit.edu
- Organization: MIT Lincoln Laboratory
- Lines: 46
-
- In article <Bxqsp3.MoH@well.sf.ca.us> rchao@well.sf.ca.us (Robert Chao) writes:
- >
- >How many SF films are realistic enough that they show there is no sound
- >in space? All I can think of is 2001.
- >--
- >Robert Chao
- >Oakland, California
-
- I assume you don't count 2010 as distinct from 2001 in this context.
-
- There is also - aptly named - "Silent Run". A politically correct movie about
- a space gardner who kills his co-workers to save his plants.
-
- Moonrakers (sp?), the James Bond foray into SF has a pointedly silent space
- *some* of the time :-) (ok, ok, 007 movies are not real SF, but there *was*
- considerable space-borne action).
-
- There are a *lot* of false effects, beside sounds in space, regularly used in
- otherwise realistic SF films: "LASER" beams that the viewer can see - in
- transit, and all those human-looking alien species, etc.
-
- I do not find false effects disturbing (or else I would not enjoy SF films).
- I have come to rationalize that these effects are "for the benefit of the
- viewer". They are "translations" from the what is taking place to what our
- human senses could more easily comprehend. We can consider language translation
- as an analogy. While it is possible to show accurate/realistic non-English
- speaking stories in the intended tung, say with subtitles; it is easier for the
- audiance if the characters speak English (replace English with your favorite
- language if needed). This does not diminish from the films realism - it is
- understood that it is a modification "for the benefit of the viewer".
- Likewise, LASER beams that can be visibly traced and space ships that sound
- like airplanes wheezing by, make it easier on the human viewer to follow the
- action.
-
-
- Dan Shoham shoham@ll.mit.edu
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