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Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Posted: Fri Oct 12, 2012 3:17 pm
by Tricky
20000 Leagues under the Sea by Jules Verne.

Stretching the sunken ship definition there and trapped people - prisoners.

Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Posted: Fri Oct 12, 2012 3:41 pm
by Cody
Tricky wrote:
20000 Leagues under the Sea by Jules Verne.
A truly great tale, is that... but alas, not the tale I'm after.

Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Posted: Fri Oct 12, 2012 5:04 pm
by Rxke
Goliath awaits (that was what I was thinking of when I blurted to raise the Poseidon :lol: )

Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Posted: Fri Oct 12, 2012 6:40 pm
by Cody
Rxke wrote:
Goliath awaits
I've never seen, nor heard of, that film... sounds interesting, though.

Clues the first (though there have been a couple of subtle, indirect clues already): the people trapped in the sunken ship manage to survive for generations.
Meanwhile, a fleet of alien spaceships is heading for Earth - this is a novel of first contact!

Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Posted: Fri Oct 12, 2012 9:08 pm
by Gimbal Locke
"The Watch Below" by James White?

Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Posted: Fri Oct 12, 2012 9:11 pm
by Cody
Indeed - and a right good tale, it is. Over to you, sir!

Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Posted: Fri Oct 12, 2012 9:25 pm
by Gimbal Locke
Who (or what) sings "praise to the master" backwards, and for who (or what) is it being sung?

(Off-topic: is my question grammatically correct?)

Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Posted: Fri Oct 12, 2012 9:30 pm
by Cody
Gimbal Locke wrote:
(Off-topic: is my question grammatically correct?)
<nods>

Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Posted: Sat Oct 13, 2012 5:41 pm
by Gimbal Locke
Gimbal Locke wrote:
Who (or what) sings "praise to the master" backwards, and for who (or what) is it being sung?
I'm looking for a television adaptation of a short story by one of the SF giants.

The song was composed by a female British composer.

Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Posted: Sat Oct 13, 2012 6:12 pm
by Cody
Gimbal Locke wrote:
The song was composed by a female British composer.
Ah... that could only be Delia Derbyshire, goddess of electronic sound (I love her stuff, especially An Electric Storm), which leads me to: robots sing it to QT1 or 'Cutie'?
The short story is Reason by Asimov, and was adapted into an episode of Out of the Unknown entitled The Prophet (I think).

Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Posted: Sat Oct 13, 2012 6:43 pm
by Gimbal Locke
El Viejo wrote:
Ah... that could only be Delia Derbyshire, goddess of electronic sound (I love her stuff, especially An Electric Storm), which leads me to: robots sing it to QT1 or 'Cutie'?
The short story is Reason by Asimov, and was adapted into an episode of Out of the Unknown entitled The Prophet (I think).
That is mostly correct. They do not sing it to QT1 ("the Prophet"), but to their power source ("Master") which is the god of the religion started by QT1.

The original song is here, a 2009 live version of the song with images of the show is here, Delia Derbyshire discusses the song here.

The complete lyrics are: "Praise to the Master/His Wisdom and His Reason/Praise to the Master/Forever and OO-OO-OO-OO/His Wis.../His Wis.../OO-OO-OO-OO."

Back to El Viejo.

Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Posted: Sun Oct 14, 2012 11:11 am
by Cody
An easy one: a rogue planet destroys Earth. A few hastily-built ships, carrying a few people, animals etc, make it to another rogue planet that has replaced Earth in its orbit. Title and author, please.

Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Posted: Sun Oct 14, 2012 12:16 pm
by Smivs
Would this be "When Worlds Collide", by Philip Wylie and Edwin Balmer?

Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Posted: Sun Oct 14, 2012 12:22 pm
by Cody
Yep... over to you!

Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Posted: Sun Oct 14, 2012 12:26 pm
by Smivs
Blimey, that was easy! Back soon with a question.