Naturalistic science fiction: Difference between revisions

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Technology is far enough advanced for star travel to be possible (see: [[FTL]] travel) and plausible; no [[Wikipedia:Star Trek|''Star Trek'']] matter-energy conversion tech, phaser weapons or other unrealistic SF [[Wikipedia:deus ex machina|deus ex machina]] exist.  
Technology is far enough advanced for star travel to be possible (see: [[FTL]] travel) and plausible; no [[Wikipedia:Star Trek|''Star Trek'']] matter-energy conversion tech, phaser weapons or other unrealistic SF [[Wikipedia:deus ex machina|deus ex machina]] exist.  


There are no "planet-of-the-week" episodes.  A majority of [[BSG (RDM)|BSG's]] episodes primarily focus on internal fleet survival issues (see: <u>[[Water]]</u> or <u>[[Bastille Day]]</u>).  There will be an absence of aliens, a la [[Wikipedia:Joss Whedon|Joss Whedon's]] [[Wikipedia:Firefly (Series)|<i>Firefly</i>]], for planets will be mostly uninhabitable and lifeless (with sound, scientific reasoning).
There are no "planet-of-the-week" episodes.  A majority of [[BSG (RDM)|BSG's]] episodes primarily focus on internal fleet survival issues (see: <u>[[Water]]</u>, <u>[[Bastille Day]]</u>, and <u>[[The Hand of God]]</u>).  There will be an absence of aliens, a la [[Wikipedia:Joss Whedon|Joss Whedon's]] [[Wikipedia:Firefly (Series)|<i>Firefly</i>]], for planets will be mostly uninhabitable and lifeless (with sound, scientific reasoning).


[[Battlestar Galactica (RDM)|BSG]] avoids the thematic elements found in ''[[Wikipedia:Star Wars|Star Wars]]'' and episodic storytelling, using a [[documentary]] feel for the series and [[tribal music]].
[[Battlestar Galactica (RDM)|BSG]] avoids the thematic elements found in ''[[Wikipedia:Star Wars|Star Wars]]'' and episodic storytelling, using a [[documentary]] feel for the series and [[tribal music]].

Revision as of 05:35, 4 August 2005

In Theory...

Naturalistic Science Fiction (NSF) is a realistic take on the SF genre, avoiding typical SF cliches, utilizing visual and artistic elements from such dramas as The Sorpranos and The West Wing.

In Practice...

For BSG this means that characters are viewed as normal, every-day people. There will be no characters that are simply the "smoking chauvinist", "loyal soldier", "heroic lead", "spiritual commander", "whiz-kid genius", or "sexy doctor".

Technology is far enough advanced for star travel to be possible (see: FTL travel) and plausible; no Star Trek matter-energy conversion tech, phaser weapons or other unrealistic SF deus ex machina exist.

There are no "planet-of-the-week" episodes. A majority of BSG's episodes primarily focus on internal fleet survival issues (see: Water, Bastille Day, and The Hand of God). There will be an absence of aliens, a la Joss Whedon's Firefly, for planets will be mostly uninhabitable and lifeless (with sound, scientific reasoning).

BSG avoids the thematic elements found in Star Wars and episodic storytelling, using a documentary feel for the series and tribal music.

Related Articles

Galactica2003.net's Reprint of RDM's Take on Naturalistic SF