Difference between revisions of "DARK STAR"
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'''DARK STAR. John Carpenter, dir.''' USA: Bryanston Pictures, 1974. [[Category: Drama]] | '''DARK STAR. John Carpenter, dir.''' USA: Bryanston Pictures, 1974. [[Category: Drama]] | ||
− | See for character Pinback trapped in the spaceship | + | See for character Pinback trapped in the spaceship ''Dark Star'''s elevator shaft, the female computer that runs the ''Dark Star'''s, and the computer-bomb that eventually develops delusions of godhead. ''S. F. Ency.'' cites a novelization by Alan Dean Foster (1974). |
− | Cf. and contrast dialog with warhead in ''Star Trek: Voyager'' episode "[[Star Trek: Voyager®, "Warhead"|Warhead]]." | + | Cf. and contrast dialog with warhead in ''Star Trek: Voyager'' episode "[[Star Trek: Voyager®, "Warhead"|Warhead]]," and the dialog over releasing a prisoner in ''[[Star Trek: Discovery]]'', episode 1.2, "Battle at the Binary Star." |
Discussed by John Thonen in "John Carpenter: Cinema of Isolation," ''Cinefantastique'' 30.7/8 (Oct. 1998): 64-73, most directly on p. 65.[https://archive.org/details/cinefantastique_1970-2002/Cinefantastique%20Vol%2030%20No%207-8%20%28Oct%201998%29/page/n63/mode/2up] | Discussed by John Thonen in "John Carpenter: Cinema of Isolation," ''Cinefantastique'' 30.7/8 (Oct. 1998): 64-73, most directly on p. 65.[https://archive.org/details/cinefantastique_1970-2002/Cinefantastique%20Vol%2030%20No%207-8%20%28Oct%201998%29/page/n63/mode/2up] | ||
[[Category: Drama]] | [[Category: Drama]] |
Revision as of 18:02, 19 March 2023
DARK STAR. John Carpenter, dir. USA: Bryanston Pictures, 1974.
See for character Pinback trapped in the spaceship Dark Stars elevator shaft, the female computer that runs the Dark Stars, and the computer-bomb that eventually develops delusions of godhead. S. F. Ency. cites a novelization by Alan Dean Foster (1974).
Cf. and contrast dialog with warhead in Star Trek: Voyager episode "Warhead," and the dialog over releasing a prisoner in Star Trek: Discovery, episode 1.2, "Battle at the Binary Star."
Discussed by John Thonen in "John Carpenter: Cinema of Isolation," Cinefantastique 30.7/8 (Oct. 1998): 64-73, most directly on p. 65.[1]