When Our Heroes are having the discussion about the nuclear self-destruct shortly after first getting into Wildfire, Hall remarks "You really expect me to fire the thing?" And Stone tells him - for at least the second time, really, but probably for the audience's benefit - that the self-destruct is activated automatically, and Hall can only stop it.
What Stone should have added is, "but if there really is a deadly infection released, I damn well expect you to let it go off!"
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Contestado por Jacinto Cupboard
el 9 de julio de 2022 a las 02:59
Seems to me that once they knew a nuclear explosion would 'feed' Andromeda, the 'odd man out' hypothesis was no longer relevant and the disarm key should have been moved to Level 1 and used the moment the self destruct countdown commenced. In fact, given that the initiation sequence was automated, the odd man out should always have been on Level 1.
Contestado por Knixon
el 9 de julio de 2022 a las 04:06
Maybe so, but movies like this are all about Because Plot/Because Drama.
Actually, I remember from reading the book that the detonation was just the final step in the self-destruct, the process in the novel was actually stopped at like 5 minutes to 0 or something, but that was still critical because just before the bomb was to go off, the air from the facility would be pumped out to make the explosion more effective somehow. So the people were going to suffocate even before the bomb went off.
They didn't do it that way in the movie, though, Because Drama.
Contestado por Jacinto Cupboard
el 9 de julio de 2022 a las 04:37
I agree. With SF, more drama usually means less science, and vice versa.
Contestado por Knixon
el 26 de julio de 2022 a las 11:03
Something I forgot before, I seem to recall that in the book, only Hall could use the key, because it sensed his body capacitance or something.