This is one episode that is an enigma. The being a taunt, dramatic
well paced story with great performances, 'The Long Sleep fails when you consider the motives of the aliens. |
----- Original Message ----- From: "Doug" <[hidden email]> To: <[hidden email]> Sent: Wednesday, February 11, 2004 8:40 PM Subject: [SHADO] Observations on 'The Long Sleep' > This is one episode that is an enigma. The being a taunt, dramatic > well paced story with great performances, 'The Long Sleep fails when > you consider the motives of the aliens. > > From watching the episode, we can conclude that: > > (1) The aliens are cheapskates since they would rather wait for a > girl to come out of a coma then go and replace a detonation trigger > in a thermo-nuclear bomb. And what if she NEVER came out of the coma? > > (2) People that own houseboats do not clean them out for AT LEAST ten > years (and nor do they notice odd-looking devices inside the deck). > > Be see'in you!:-D > > Doug > ------------------------------------------------------------ ....Nor move them.... Dave H. |
In reply to this post by Doug
"Doug" wrote:
> (2) People that own houseboats do not clean them out for AT LEAST ten > years (and nor do they notice odd-looking devices inside the deck). > This at least I find quite credible. I'm sure a few people own sheds, caravans and delapidated houseboats that they haven't set foot in side for decades. |
Well, I for one find it hard to think that a mobile object like a
houseboat was in the exact same spot for 10 years, that the owner didn't spot the trigger, that no inquisitive kids ever climbed onboard and spotted it, and as previously said, that in 10 years the aliens didn't just call home and ask that another trigger be shipped over. Plus, if they are looking for body parts, or a place to colonize, what good does it do to set off a bomb and wipe everything out? Just too many loose ends in that episode for me, especially when there was no need for most of them. They could have had her drop it down a well, where it could easily have stayed hidden (still doesn't explain the lack of a replacement trigger). Things like that frustrate me I guess. Bill --- In [hidden email], James Gibbon <james.gibbon@v...> wrote: > "Doug" wrote: > > > (2) People that own houseboats do not clean them out for AT LEAST ten > > years (and nor do they notice odd-looking devices inside the deck). > > > > This at least I find quite credible. I'm sure a few people own > sheds, caravans and delapidated houseboats that they haven't set > foot in side for decades. |
In reply to this post by Doug
"Bill Cotter" wrote:
> Well, I for one find it hard to think that a mobile object like a > houseboat was in the exact same spot for 10 years, that the owner > didn't spot the trigger, that no inquisitive kids ever climbed > onboard and spotted it, and as previously said, that in 10 years the > aliens didn't just call home and ask that another trigger be shipped > over. Plus, if they are looking for body parts, or a place to > colonize, what good does it do to set off a bomb and wipe everything > out? Just too many loose ends in that episode for me, especially when > there was no need for most of them. They could have had her drop it > down a well, where it could easily have stayed hidden (still doesn't > explain the lack of a replacement trigger). Things like that > frustrate me I guess. I agree with you generally Bill, apart from the first point. It's typical of a few UFO episodes - great scenery, dialogue, effects, lots of drama, but it's all built on a very shaky idea and storyline which really don't stand scrutiny. In spite of its faults though, and it IS a fundamentally flawed episode - not just in its details but in its conception - I quite like THE LONG SLEEP. I love the scenes filmed around Piccadilly Circus and Covent Garden, and the scene with the Aliens in the farmhouse is very entertaining. |
Don't get me wrong - I like the episode, for some of the reasons you
mentioned below. In fact, I like all of them, just some a tad less than others. I still think UFO is far, far above (no pun intended!) most of the other series of its time - and today. That just makes the silly points, such as the 10 year delay in a replacement trigger, all the more glaring to me. Bill --- In [hidden email], James Gibbon <james.gibbon@v...> wrote: > > I agree with you generally Bill, apart from the first point. It's > typical of a few UFO episodes - great scenery, dialogue, effects, > lots of drama, but it's all built on a very shaky idea and > storyline which really don't stand scrutiny. In spite of its > faults though, and it IS a fundamentally flawed episode - not > just in its details but in its conception - I quite like THE > LONG SLEEP. I love the scenes filmed around Piccadilly Circus > and Covent Garden, and the scene with the Aliens in the > farmhouse is very entertaining. |
In reply to this post by Doug
Could be that the device was a one shot deal. Remember that a lot has been
said that the aliens come from a dying planet with possibly limited resources. Perhaps the components of the bomb and it triggering device were the only one made. Maybe the aliens who brought it didn't get back. Or maybe the High Commander on their home planet doesn't deal lightly with failure(in other words he makes Straker seem like a real softy in comparison). So they do a number on Tim and leave him to watch Catherine and find out where the missing part is and carry out the mission. Few things in real live work out as planned. Often you have to improvise and make the best of what you have. It's very easy to nitpick holes on a plot you never saws when it was new after more than 30 years. James K. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
James, I like your concept where perhaps the aliens in 'The Long
Sleep' do not survive the journey back to their home planet, and thus the bomb is overlooked by future Earth-venturing UFOs. The idea of the aliens coming from a dying planet wouldn't be in debate, but certainly it could be argued that their resources are NOT limited since the alien race seems to have an endless supply of UFOs to send to Earth often, and in varying numbers.... Doug |
In reply to this post by Doug
Doug,
Yes, the aliens did seem to have a large number of UFO's at their command. Perhaps they were stockpiles left over from better days? Perhaps then the materials that the bomb was made of were too rare and had run out. Another thought is perhaps whomever built the original bomb might not have been alive to build another one, didn't get the transplants he needed in time or something like that. James K. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
In reply to this post by Doug
Perhaps the aliens government is just as disorganized as the US government and military. The US starts and stops great and grandiose programs all the time seemingly at random and with no regard to completion, success or failure. [Two examples: The amazing functioning failure of the Space Shuttle program (not just the lost vehicles and people) goes on and will indeed eventually fly again even though the program really failed most of its goals and the US would have been far better off continuing to build and develop Saturn5 and other expendable vehicles. - also; the International Space Station was a program that could have been a real success but support is dwindling and it is unlikely to ever be but a pale shadow of its original intent.] Somehow, through all of its fits and starts, success and failures, the US amazingly survives and maintains a (diminishing) technological edge through the program chaos. With that set up, jump back to UFO, imagine the aliens with such a government, under the pressure of being a dying race too. I find it very easy to accept that no new detonator was sent, perhaps that program was cancelled before one could be sent. Perhaps simply a change in leadership. Try this scenario: Alien regime #1 happily harvests organs for a while but is then seriously disrupted by SHADO. Ship and personnel losses as well as unstable organ supplies destabilize the alien leaders political power and he/it is replaced. Regime #2 wants to be done with it all and rub it in good (sound familiar?) so orders the bomb up for a little scorched-earth-diplomacy. Bomb fails and that failure costs them the leadership, nobody really cares why the bomb fails or follows up with the replacement detonator because regime #3 wants to resume organ harvesting and may not even know about the bomb at all. There's about a million variations of how this could go down as seen in the episode, just by modeling the scenario upon Earthly governments behaviors. Add in behavior models of militaries, religions, companies, groups and individuals and there are almost infinite ways that what happens *visibly* in the episode could be explained. It's been said before and I am in complete agreement, UFO is just as entertaining for what isn't explained as for what is. Leaving it up to us to guess at the motivations of the aliens is part of the value of the show. If it were all to be completely explained, there would be no magic. I just realized this while writing this message... With a fair bit of twisting, the whole UFO theme could be warped into a story of the United States (aliens) harvesting oil (organs) from the Middle east (Earth). Lots of other historical conflicts too like [UK, tea, India] or [Spain, gold, Central America], it's really a timeless conflict whenever somebody wants someone else's stuff. So no matter what kinds of holes we may find in individual UFO episodes one of the things that makes UFO so endearing and timeless is the simple underlying foundation of the conflict. The fact that the show was made in such a way as to also be timelessly entertaining is evident in the fact that we all are still interested in watching and discussing the show. ...And a big reason for that is the skill with which the story is told. The story doesn't have to be flawless in order to be good. The strong characters and interesting (if flawed) storylines are more than the sum of their parts which is why we can look past the shows problems and still enjoy it. Works that way for me anyway. Shawn Kelly www.sdaa.org >Date: Fri, 13 Feb 2004 10:24:02 EST >From: [hidden email] >Subject: Re: Re: Observations on 'The Long Sleep' >Doug, >Yes, the aliens did seem to have a large number of UFO's at their >command. Perhaps they were stockpiles left over from better days? Perhaps then >the materials that the bomb was made of were too rare and had run out. Another >thought is perhaps whomever built the original bomb might not have been alive >to build another one, didn't get the transplants he needed in time or >something like that. >James K. |
--- In [hidden email], "Shawn Kelly" <sdkelly@s...> wrote:
> > Perhaps the aliens government is just as disorganized as the US government > and military. The US starts and stops great and grandiose programs all the > time seemingly at random and with no regard to completion, success or > failure. [Two examples: The amazing functioning failure of the Space > Shuttle program (not just the lost vehicles and people) goes on and will > indeed eventually fly again even though the program really failed most of > its goals and the US would have been far better off continuing to build and > develop Saturn5 and other expendable vehicles. - also; the International > Space Station was a program that could have been a real success but support > is dwindling and it is unlikely to ever be but a pale shadow of its > original intent.] Somehow, through all of its fits and starts, success and > failures, the US amazingly survives and maintains a (diminishing) > technological edge through the program chaos. Hi Shawn: First of all - I should point out that that far from being disorganized, the U.S. Government is very organized; that the U.S. Military functions like a well oilled machine. Nothing is perfect in the real world. Two - NASA (Government / Civilian) runs the Space Program - not the military. Three - The Shuttle Program has been a magnificent success. While there have been loses (Challenger and Columbia), that is the price that must be paid to venture into the unknown. Exploration is never cheap. There have been great rewards earned from every Dollar spent. Lets just remember that both Soyuz and Apollo have had their share of tragedy as well - Soyuz on several occassions, yet the Russians continue to fly. Four - Support is waining for the ISS because of the problems with getting it built. Problems of design. Problems in manufacture (as the Russians are FAR FAR FAR behind in delivery) Five - Saturn 5 booster. Here I do agree. This booster should have never been shelved. Did you know there are plans currently to put the first two stages back into production? Lets all take time here to remember the Russian (Soviet) N1 booster - and the desasters with it. Six - Expendable vehicles: Extremely expensive over time. What is really needed is a space-only vehicle like the LM. But a reusable vehicle has it's advantages also. Lets not forget that the engineering that went into the Space Shuttle is more than 30 years old and NO ONE has yet come up with equivelent. Lets face facts - the age of the expendable capsules is really over. There may be a brief continuation, but that is all. Just like you don't board a propeller driven airliner to fly across oceans and continents. Reusable equipment is the wave of the future. Shawn, it's really easy to blame others - in this case the U.S. Government (NASA) and the Military for problems with the current space program. But more specifically - lets lay the blame where blame is to be laid: the uneducated public. How any times do you hear that the Space budget needs to be cut? Social programs here and there are more important. But lets point out this to you. Only the U.S. and Russia (Soviet Union) have ever flown repeated missions into space. China is trying to play catch- up with antique technology and is TOTALLY FAILING in the relm. The Europeans have never placed any living thing in orbit by themselves - nor have the Indians, Japanise, or Australians - and for that matter NO one other than the U.S., Russia, and China. If you really want to contribute something. Write those in power. Write the ones that do the budgets. Write those that spend the money. Ask them: about the welfare system that gives money to people who really don't need it. I have seen from personal observation a lady at a supermarket pay for $400+ in food with USDA Food Stamps and then load them into a new Ford Explorer. I think this $400 could have been better spent: On research and development; On education; On a million more worth-while causes than what it was. What should also be remembered is that "Space is not only a completely unforgiving - but also the most hostile enviornment in which Man has ever ventured." I would like to take credit for those words, but I cannot. They are those of Dr. Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin. Hugs, Tasha |
Thank you Tasha. I do not have the words that you do. Are you the tasha that
is in the Space 1999 group? scott [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
--- In [hidden email], bslwrsf@a... wrote:
> Thank you Tasha. I do not have the words that you do. Are you the tasha that > is in the Space 1999 group? scott > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] No sorry, that's not me. As a Sci-fi fan I have watched Space 1999 occasionally, but it really never peaked my interest as UFO did. Tasha |
In reply to this post by Doug
One of the things about TLS is that the alien uniforms
changed quite a bit...From the fetish-chain-link accents to the bland silver waist bands (even though it was 10 year prior to "Identified"... JF ===== Click to subscribe to Don_Ellis __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? New and Improved Yahoo! Mail - Send 10MB messages! http://promotions.yahoo.com/new_mail |
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