They also made amazing computerized wire rigs for the actors they used in conjunction with motion-controlled cameras. The production of the show was super impressive.
Also - everyone should read the books. They’re fantastic.
Ty Frank, one of the authors and the Amos actor Wes Chatham had a really fun podcast (“Ty and That Guy”) that did lots of fun deep dives on genre stuff.
That was such a nice touch and just cost some red leds. I’m the books they spend a lot of time on the float (to expensive to burn all the time). The way the TV show got around it all was great
Production costs!
The expanse did this well because they used acceleration not artificial gravity.
They also made amazing computerized wire rigs for the actors they used in conjunction with motion-controlled cameras. The production of the show was super impressive.
Also - everyone should read the books. They’re fantastic.
Ty Frank, one of the authors and the Amos actor Wes Chatham had a really fun podcast (“Ty and That Guy”) that did lots of fun deep dives on genre stuff.
Expanse did it amazingly imo, it also adds some realism into a otherwise very fictional story, which makes it somewhat easier to vibe with it.
Gawwwd, the scene where mid fight there are unsecured wrenches floating around was so beautifully tense.
“Captain, we were hit by a Class IV Photon torpedo in the aft. The production budget exploded!”
And magnetic shoes.
That was such a nice touch and just cost some red leds. I’m the books they spend a lot of time on the float (to expensive to burn all the time). The way the TV show got around it all was great
Don’t forget the sound, that clunk with every step is what sold it as real.
Just flip around halfway and start slowing down! Free acceleration / deceleration gravity.
Well, not free. Acceleration usually requires a bunch of energy.
I guess if you have to do it anyway then it’s a really convenient side-effect.
They actually do that in The Expanse.
That would be why I brought it up, yes.
Oh ok, got you