Alien Planet

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Alien Planet
Image Entertainment
Meteor Studios
Original release
NetworkDiscovery Channel
Release14 May 2005 (2005-05-14)

Alien Planet is a 2005 docufiction TV special created for the Discovery Channel. Based on the 1990 book Expedition by the artist and writer Wayne Barlowe, Alien Planet explores the imagined extraterrestrial life of the fictional planet Darwin IV in the style of a nature documentary. Although closely following Barlowe's depiction of Darwin IV, Alien Planet features a team of scientists and science fiction figures discussing Darwin IV as if it had actually been discovered. Among the people featured are Michio Kaku, Stephen Hawking, Jack Horner, James B. Garvin and George Lucas.

Alien Planet garnered positive reviews as a thought-provoking programme, though some criticism was raised concerning the strange creatures featured, which some reviewers saw as bordering on implausible.

Plot

Alien Planet starts out with an

sapient
species.

The robotic probes sent out to research on Darwin IV are called

holographic message that will be projected to any sentient
life found on Darwin.

After the two probes inflate their gas-bags, they encounter a voracious Arrowtongue and watch it pursue a Gyrosprinter. Later that night, the twins find the wreckage of Balboa and are ordered to split up, Ike studying the unique plant life and Leo going after big game. Ike's voyage takes him to one of Darwin IV's

weather balloons. Leo goes to the mountain ranges and finds a herd of Unths engaged in rutting
-like behavior.

Afterward, Leo finds a pair of Bladderhorns engaging in combat. It tries to communicate with one, but a

gullies of Darwin IV, encountering massive Grovebacks and a herd
of Littoralopes. Flying above are dangerous predators: the Skewers.

Leo briefly re-establishes contact with Von Braun, but soon gets destroyed by a mysterious and evasive creature, and Ike is ordered by the mothership to search for Leo and his attacker. Ike's route takes him over perilous terrain, and across the Amoebic Sea. As he embarks on his journey, one of the Grovebacks seen earlier falls victim to a swarm of Beach Quills. Ike then finds a pack of Prongheads hunting a Gyrosprinter, and crosses the Amoebic Sea (which attempts to attack him), encountering a herd of giant Sea Striders.

Ike manages to find Leo after a harrowing experience with a Skewer which tries to attack him, but is killed by a spear thrown by the newly discovered floating Eosapien. Shortly afterward, Ike communicates with the Eosapien tribe and discovers that they are truly intelligent. Ike launches a camera disk to record the moment, or perhaps "to assess the threat" due to a third Eosapien appearing; however one of the Eosapiens mistakes it as an attack and destroys the camera disk. Before shutting down, the wrecked camera disk records the Eosapien tribe carrying Ike away.

Commentary from notable people discussing the details behind the fictional world of Darwin IV and the likelihood of extraterrestrial life, in general, is interspersed throughout the special.

Production

Alien Planet is based on

paleontologist Jack Horner, NASA chief scientist James B. Garvin and director, screenwriter and producer George Lucas.[1] Though the documentary gives the appearance of the featured scientists having designed Darwin IV and its animals,[2] most of what is shown of the actual planet and its life follows what is described in Expedition.[1]

Though much of Darwin IV and its creatures is identical to what was presented in the book, Alien Planet diverges from Expedition in several ways. Unlike Expedition, which is set in the mid-24th century, Alien Planet is set at an unspecified point in the

Reception

Writing in The Space Review, the space historian Dwayne A. Day gave the special a positive review and concluded that "the writers and producers of Alien Planet have managed to successfully transcend current definitions of biology and yet still remained within the realm of the possible".[1]

As also happened with the 1990 book, some criticism was leveled by reviewers at the strangeness of the creatures showcased in Alien Planet. In his review of the TV special, Dwayne A. Day stated that "the animals are bizarre and frequently border on the implausible" and that "they do not appear to have been developed with a single biological theory in mind". Day also noted, concerning the scientists who talk about the animals as if they were real, "clearly some of them think that the animals that they are supposed to report about are barely plausible". However, Day also stated that the Darwinian creatures are thought-provoking and that their strangeness is a good departure from the typical science fiction approach of making alien life look much like Earth life (such as using humanoid aliens). According to Day, the life of Darwin IV "makes the point that alien life, if it is detected, will challenge our abilities to understand and even comprehend it".[1] A review in The Washington Post stated that "a few too many of the creatures seem like cartoonish monsters", though stated "but around almost every corner one encounters some sort of nutritious food for thought".[3]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Day, Dwayne A. (2005). "The Space Review: Voyages to alien worlds (page 2)". The Space Review. Archived from the original on 2005-09-23. Retrieved 2021-07-11.
  2. ^ "ALIEN PLANET TAKES A VIRTUAL MISSION IN SEARCH OF INTELLIGENT LIFE IN NEW DISCOVERY CHANNEL WORLD PREMIERE, SATURDAY, MAY 14, AT 8 PM (ET/PT)". comicbookbin.com. Retrieved 2021-07-11.
  3. ISSN 0190-8286
    . Retrieved 2021-05-05.

External links