Shown Their Work/Film: Difference between revisions

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* In the movie ''[[Interstellar]]'', the creators showed their work with the black hole. They wanted time dilation and their scientific consultant suggested a black hole. When they asked the scientific consultant to help them make the black hole, instead of just telling him about it, he gave them a bunch of algorithms. Over a year later with a thousands of computers number crunching ([[Doing It for the Art|because they wanted to do this right]]), they got the result,. the[[Coconut Effect|The creators thought there was a bug in the program. [[Coconutwhen Effect|Thethey saw that the black hole they got looked like no other black hole portrayal before]],. It looked so different because this was the first time (in the main stream at least, perhaps outside the mainstream too) the raw data was used to create images to the standard of accuracy they went for. The scientific consultant said "“Why, of course. That’s what it would do.” Even so, the consultant was surprised with the result.
* Before making ''[[Dr. Strangelove]]'', [[Stanley Kubrick]] and several of his collaborators read dozens of reports made by the Air Force and the RAND Corporation. Dr. Strangelove himself is caricature of Wernher von Braun, Edward Teller and Herman Kahn. Interestingly it was Kahn who suggested the Doomsday Machine, which was exactly the kind of defense that Herman Kahn fought against in his work. This attention to the smallest technical and military details is where the film gets its infamous [[Black Comedy|nervous humor]]. Additionally, at the time of the filming, the interior of a B-52 was highly classified. The film crew made up the layout and look by extrapolation from the older B-29, and laid out the floor plan based on the external measurements of the 52. They did such a good job, the Air Force was concerned briefly that they had an insider source.
* Along with [[Arthur C. Clarke]], Kubrick made the same effort with ''<nowiki>[[2001: A Space Odyssey]]</nowiki>'', in regards to space travel and general scientific accuracy, even though the atomic-powered spaceship does not have radiator fins to get rid of the reactor's waste heat. The makers intentionally left them off, because after a decade teaching the public that there is no air in space, they didn't want them wondering why the spacecraft has wings.