On Feb 3, 8:39 pm, Sylvia Else <syl...@not.here.invalid> wrote:
> On 4/02/2012 10:30 AM, Jonathan wrote:
>
> > "David Spain"<
nos...@127.0.0.1> wrote in message
> >news:3PqdnYNYhb3Wu7HS...@giganews.com...
> >> Jonathan wrote:
> >>> One question the movie raised for me.
> >>> Could the astronauts take off from the
> >>> Moon, rendezvous and return to Earth, even
> >>> if Houston was actively trying to stop them
> >>> from getting back home?
>
> >> Umm didn't see Apollo 18, maybe will on cable pay-per-view, not sure.
>
> >> How did they handle the story line of the CM pilot just, well,
> >> saying see you guys (or whatever you are) later....
>
> > That would be a spoiler.
>
> Though for those who don't intend to see the movie, or don't care about
> spoilers, the Wikipedia article for the movie contains a plot summary,
> including the ending.
>
> Sylvia.
All in all I'd give the movie a thumbs up. I think science fiction
fans would like it best though. It did have some shock moments for
horror fans.
An aspect of the movie I liked is that the mission landed at the
lunar south pole near one of the permanently shadowed craters. There
was some dialogue in fact about not going too far down into the crater
since their suits were not rated for temperatures that low.
Missions to some of these permanently shadowed craters are in fact
being now contemplated since orbital observations suggest these might
have deposits with a high proportion of cometary ice, organic
materials, and minerals that could be used for propellant or to
support a lunar colony.
And since such deposits from comets, which are believed to have
delivered the building blocks of life to Earth, would be preserved in
pristine condition from early in the solar systems history, who knows
what else they could contain ...
Bob Clark