Re: R.I.P Leonard Nimoy/Mr.Spock
Posted: 07 Oct 2017, 15:07
The original series certainly do, Francis. I know that various new series do too - but I won't pretend that the new ones capture me like the original.
For the discussion of all aspects of the life and works of Enid Blyton.
http://www.enidblytonsociety.co.uk/forums/
http://www.enidblytonsociety.co.uk/forums/viewtopic.php?f=14&t=6594
No, it is only available on the subscription service, Netflix, Francis. Should you wish to try it, it is currently on a free one-month trial.Francis wrote:I presume that this doesn't appear on Freeview? (Excuse my ignorance!).
https://www.grunge.com/794263/times-sta ... he-future/As Arthur C. Clarke once said, "trying to predict the future is a discouraging, hazardous occupation." Yet, in 1966, "Star Trek" creator Gene Roddenberry did just that when he set out to create a science fiction program like few others, filled with a sense of realism and believability despite its outlandish concepts and far-future setting. Aboard the starship Enterprise, Captain Kirk and Mr. Spock didn't magically move from planet to planet; they used an advanced warp drive system that was run by a team of officers in the ship's engine room.
Over the years, the franchise has populated its lore with all kinds of technology that extrapolated the world of its day into the world of tomorrow, and in doing so, it made wild predictions about what was to come. Across multiple TV series and a number of films, "Star Trek" even invented its own history of our future, too, with historic events that wound past our present day and into the world of Kirk, Spock, and beyond. But how much did they get right?
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