Editing 2561: Moonfall
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==Explanation== | ==Explanation== | ||
+ | {{incomplete|Created by COOL EXPLOSIONS. - Please change this comment when editing this page. Do NOT delete this tag too soon.}} | ||
[[Megan]] asks [[Cueball]] if he is excited for the release of the movie ''Moonfall''. | [[Megan]] asks [[Cueball]] if he is excited for the release of the movie ''Moonfall''. | ||
− | ''{{w|Moonfall (film)|Moonfall}}'' | + | ''{{w|Moonfall (film)|Moonfall}}'' is an upcoming 2022 movie scheduled for release in February. Its director, {{w|Roland Emmerich}}, is known for blowing up things in his movies (see for instance [https://www.gq.com/video/watch/explosions-the-roland-emmerich-supercut the Roland Emmerich Supercut]), as well as for factual inaccuracies in his work (mainly the scientific implausibility of his many disaster movies like ''{{w|Independence Day (1996 film)|Independence Day}}'', ''{{w|The Day After Tomorrow}}'' and ''{{w|2012 (film)|2012}}''). |
− | The [ | + | The [[#Plot|plot]] of ''Moonfall'' is scientifically preposterous, making it potentially "cringe-worthy" for someone who enjoys "hard" science fiction, like Cueball. |
− | + | For the moon to fall from the sky, it would have to stop orbiting. Most forces applied it to will simply change the way in which it is orbiting, making it more elliptical, larger or smaller. To stop it from orbiting entirely, a 'breaking' force would need to be applied in the opposite direction of its travel, to halt it. | |
− | + | The moon's mass is about 0.07346 * 10^24 kg and it's speed about 1.022 km/s, so the energy needed to stop it is 1/2 m v^2 or about 3.8364 * 10^28 joules. That's about the energy of 1 trillion large nuclear explosions, centered on the trailing-most point of the moon's surface. | |
− | + | Cueball explains to Megan that he usually likes it when stories are based on good science. Maybe only bending it a bit to create the story, to expand our ideas of what is possible. But then he goes on to state that he supports giving Roland Emmerich as much money as he wants, to make cool spaceship noises and smash moons into things. In the movie it is only a moon (the {{w|Moon}}, presumably, see the [[#Plot|plot]] below). But in general Roland often uses huge explosions in his movies, something also previously said about other similarly-styled directors like [[748: Worst-Case Scenario|Michael Bay]]. | |
− | + | Megan sums the situation for Cueball up, stating that he is excited to expand our ideas of how much stuff can explode at once. | |
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− | + | In the title text Cueball continues by explaining that while novel ideas and explosions are good, what he really want from a movie is novel ideas about cool explosions. So new ways to explode things, or ideas about exploding more things at once. Or both. | |
− | + | ===Plot=== | |
+ | '''Spoiler Alert''' | ||
+ | :In Moonfall, a mysterious force knocks the Moon from its orbit around Earth and sends it hurtling on a collision course with life as we know it. With mere weeks before impact and the world on the brink of annihilation, NASA executive and former astronaut Jo Fowler is convinced she has the key to saving us all - but only one astronaut from her past, Brian Harper[,] and a conspiracy theorist K.C. Houseman believe her. These unlikely heroes will mount an impossible last-ditch mission into space, leaving behind everyone they love, only to find out that our Moon is not what we think it is. —Centropolis Entertainment, [https://www.imdb.com/title/tt5834426/plotsummary?ref_=tt_ov_pl quoted at IMDB] | ||
==Transcript== | ==Transcript== | ||
− | :[Cueball and Megan walking to the right] | + | :[Cueball and Megan walking to the right]] |
:Megan: Are you excited for ''Moonfall''? | :Megan: Are you excited for ''Moonfall''? | ||
:Megan: Or cringing? | :Megan: Or cringing? | ||
:Cueball: Well... | :Cueball: Well... | ||
− | :[Closeup on Cueball] | + | :[Closeup on Cueball]] |
:Cueball: I like when stories are grounded in good science because it's exciting to expand our ideas of what's possible. | :Cueball: I like when stories are grounded in good science because it's exciting to expand our ideas of what's possible. | ||