T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
833.1 | | VAXCAT::GOLDY | What do you want from me | Fri Mar 21 1997 09:36 | 3 |
| I watched it once, never again. It's extremely weak.
Goldy.
|
833.2 | | KERNEL::PARRY | Trevor Parry | Fri Mar 21 1997 10:41 | 8 |
| I wasn't going to be the first to say "I've watched it once, never
again". :-) I saw the one on Saturday. The first half showed the
crime and the second half showed the crime again but with a bit more
detail (in case you didn't get it all the first time). Seems like a
clever way of spinning a half hour story out to an hour. Kochanski, er
I mean Chloe Annett is very nice though.
/tmp
|
833.3 | | FORTY2::BOYES | My karma ran over my dogma | Fri Mar 21 1997 11:30 | 8 |
| I like it, but then I like everything. Interesting to see Twelve Monkeys
type time travel ("Its already happened") handled so lightly. Every crime
*has* to be completely different to how it was initially perceived in order
for them to fail (or have failed) to prevent it, which will eventually become
tiring, but at the moment I think its OK. Like the Radio Times says, its the
Holy Grail of TV: The Cop Show No-One Has Done Before.
+Mark+
|
833.4 | | WOTVAX::STONEG | Magician Among the Spirits......... | Fri Mar 21 1997 12:10 | 6 |
|
I think it's pretty good, but who else thinks it's done a bit 'tongue
in cheek' ? Some of the dialogue and acting is just a bit too over the
top to be taken seriously.
G
|
833.5 | A good idea on paper which has not delivered on celluloid. | CHEFS::CROSSA | It ain't loud enough, punk! | Mon Mar 24 1997 12:04 | 15 |
| >>Nearly up there with Bugs.
Is that a compliment?
Very tongue in cheek, which I understand was intentional. I spent the
first episode watching for the locations used in Reading and after that I've
not bothered.
Good of the Beeb to try something a little different on a Saturday
night though.
Stretch.
|
833.6 | | MARVEL::DAVIDC | Don't lose your head. | Mon Mar 24 1997 14:54 | 13 |
|
re: -.1
> Is that a compliment?
Sure is.
I really do like these light 20:10 type progs that the Beeb put on.
Beats the crap out of cak light Casualty.
Chris D.
|
833.7 | | VAXCAT::GOLDY | As smug as a goldfish | Mon Mar 24 1997 16:13 | 4 |
| Anything that is put on BBC1 at 20:10 on a Saturday night is, IMO, just
a schedule filler and nowt to write home about.
Goldy.
|
833.8 | | COMICS::MILLSS | "Jump! Jump now!" ...Kosh | Tue Apr 08 1997 13:35 | 7 |
| Of course its tongue-in-cheek. Its more like pantomime with every passing week.
What about last week's speech at the end from Morris saying Slade must have a
double and belongs to an organisation called "the Machine". Pure farce.
I love it!
Simes %^)
|
833.9 | Dear Anne Robinson, YOYOY | GTJAIL::MARTIN | Out to Lunch | Mon Apr 28 1997 13:31 | 3 |
| So what I want to know is, in the last episode when the bad guy was
pointing the gun at David Wickes to stop him getting back to the time
machine, why wasn't he already in the room preparing to travel back ?
|
833.10 | | FORTY2::BOYES | My karma ran over my dogma | Mon Apr 28 1997 17:26 | 12 |
| Time Machines, even when they are not actively been used, must obey some
special rules as to whether time travellers can be seen/met in them: otherwise
every time Slade and Holly rush back to their machine, they would meet
themselves about to set off (seeing as how you have to reintegrate at the
moment you leave, so you can continue your life at the point you left off,
without any injuries you didn't have at the time you travelled but inexplicably
*with* any betting slips you bought then). Presumably in order to avoid a Loop
of Infinity the time machines exhude some sort of variant-timestream aura ray
thing which is identical to the real world with the necessary excpetion that
no-one is ever in there when you visit.
+Mark+ (Who also makes sense of Quantum Leap)
|
833.11 | Paradox Alert | GTJAIL::MARTIN | Out to Lunch | Tue Apr 29 1997 14:48 | 11 |
| >>> variant-timestream aura ray thing
That explains it then :-)
Of course, this doesn't explain how, on Star Trek, when they hit a
black hole and ended up back in the 1960s, then they beamed the pilot
back into his aircraft at the exact point in time they took him in the
first place, he didn't remember anything.
Surely this means if Slade goes back two hours, when he gets there, he
won't be able to remember why he went back ?
|
833.12 | | WOTVAX::STONEG | Magician Among the Spirits......... | Tue Apr 29 1997 17:44 | 7 |
|
Ah, but that was using a black hole to do the time travelling rather
than a mchine. I suspect that the rules of time-travel differ depending
on the method used.... I mean, the De lorean had different rules than
both the black hole and the 'Crime traveller' machine didn't it ?
Graham
|
833.13 | Time is natures way of stopping everything happening at once | GTJAIL::MARTIN | Out to Lunch | Tue Apr 29 1997 19:36 | 8 |
| Maybe then this is why they can't go forward in time; if they stuck
whats-her-name's machine on a truck and travelled at 65mph maybe they
could go forwards as well (or sling-shot it around the sun at Warp Factor
10).
However this doesn't explain how the Tardis works, or that thing
Cheryl Lad and Chris Kristofferson backed airplanes through in
"Millenium", both of which could be used to change the past as well.
|
833.14 | | TERRI::SIMON | Semper in Excernere | Wed Apr 30 1997 11:44 | 8 |
| re "Millenium"
But changing the past did cause time quakes thought didn't it.
Still a damn good film.
Simon
|
833.15 | | MARVEL::DAVIDC | Don't lose your head. | Thu May 01 1997 11:49 | 10 |
|
From what I've seen and know about the subject - I'll have to go along
with Holly on Crime Traveller and her rules, 'specially since no one
I know seems to have a clue on how the TARDIS "really" works.
Chris D.
(I know Millsie will differ on opinion to this one.)
|
833.16 | | KERNEL::PARRY | Trevor Parry | Thu May 01 1997 16:01 | 7 |
| None of these tie into that Stephen King mini-series called The
Gondoliers or something. If you went to the past there all the nasty
Gondoliers had eaten everything, houses, plants, the whole world, and
just left gaseous clouds behind, which would make sense, you could get
serious indigetion problems with what they were eating.
/tmp
|
833.17 | | TERRI::SIMON | Semper in Excernere | Fri May 02 1997 15:11 | 1 |
| Wasn't it The Langoliers
|
833.18 | | KERNEL::PARRY | Trevor Parry | Thu May 08 1997 10:19 | 1 |
| That sounds better, well I got most of the letters right :-)
|
833.19 | Forwards to the Past | CHEFS::LINCOLN_J | | Fri May 16 1997 15:36 | 13 |
| Of course in the original (H.G.Wells) Time Machine it was
possible to travel forward in time. As I remeber it, this was
achieved by rotating an umbrella at some rate. I never noticed
this effect myself when spinning an old brolly but perhaps
it's a question of what material it's made of. Zanicordium
and dilythium crystal are both known to create an interaction
with the space-time continuum, or ether, as we used to call it.
Personally I'd be prepared to believe most everything that
Holly might say and if she'd care to call round for an in-depth
discussion of spatimion physics that'd be fine by me.
-John
|
833.20 | http://timem.ml.org/proxy.htm | GTJAIL::MARTIN | Out to Lunch | Fri May 30 1997 11:16 | 4 |
| Check out the above URL. Neat idea; start researching the possibility
of developing a time machine, then hope someone from the future who
already has one comes back to find out how it all started. (Then nick
theirs, presumably).
|