In the mid-22nd century, mankind has begun to colonize interstellar space. Armed with artificially intelligent Thermostellar Triggering Devices, which can talk and reason, the scout ship Dark Star searches for "unstable planets" which might threaten future colonization.
Twenty years into its mission, the Dark Star has aged and suffers frequent malfunctions. Commanding officer Powell has died in one such event, but remains aboard in cryogenic suspension. Lieutenant Doolittle, a former surfer from Malibu, has taken over as commander. The tedium of their work has driven the crew of Pinback, Boiler, and Talby "around the bend", so they have created distractions for themselves.
Pinback plays practical jokes, maintains a video diary, and has adopted a ship's mascot in the form of a mischievous "beach ball"-like alien who refuses to stay in a storage room. After it attempts to push him down an elevator shaft, he eventually kills it with a gun. He claims to really be Bill Froug and says that the real Pinback has committed suicide.
En route to their next target in the Veil Nebula,[6] the Dark Star is hit by electromagnetic energy during a space storm, resulting in another on-board malfunction. Thermostellar Bomb #20 receives an erroneous order to deploy, but the ship's computer talks it back into the bomb bay. An accident with a laser then causes more mayhem, damaging the ship's computer. Bomb #20 deploys again, and this time the crew cannot convince it to stand down. Doolittle revives Powell, who advises him to teach the bomb phenomenology. Doolittle space walks out to have a philosophical conversation with the bomb. It agrees to disarm itself for the moment.
Pinback opens the airlock to admit Doolittle, but accidentally ejects Talby, who was in the airlock attempting to repair the laser. Doolittle leaves the ship to retrieve Talby, who is in a space suit but has no maneuvering device. The bomb, having learned Cartesian doubt, trusts only itself. Convinced that only it exists, and that its sole purpose in life is to explode, it does so. Dark Star is destroyed, along with Pinback and Boiler. Talby and Doolittle, at a distance from the ship, are thrown clear. The former drifts into the Phoenix Asteroids, a cluster with which he has long been fascinated. Doolittle, falling toward the unstable planet, finds an oblong hunk of debris, and surfs into the atmosphere, to die as a falling star.
Top of Page Bottom of Page PermalinkFull Name: Alan R StoneSculptor
on Saturday, January 29, 2022 – 02:03 pm
That reminds me... I was
That reminds me... I was watching an episode of the 20 year old sci fi tv series Farscape last week (highly recommend it for stoner binge watching), and the lead characters were on a distant planet across the universe at a nightclub of sorts with all the aliens mingling and dancing, and the only Earth guy in the show says something like, "Reminds me of a Grateful Dead concert." None of the other characters knew what he was talking about.
Top of Page Bottom of Page PermalinkFull Name: Def. High Surfdead
on Saturday, January 29, 2022 – 10:30 pm
One time I was at a Dead show
One time I was at a Dead show in 1974 - they played Dark Star and the venue turned into a starship, so there's that.
Top of Page Bottom of Page PermalinkFull Name: Rasputin O'Leary Rasmataz
on Sunday, January 30, 2022 – 04:25 pm
^^ Absolutely Fucking Perfect
^^ Absolutely Fucking Perfect ^^
Sounds like the Zone motto
Does this place even have a motto ?
Top of Page Bottom of Page PermalinkFull Name: Alan R StoneSculptor
on Sunday, January 30, 2022 – 04:40 pm
^
^
"It's a bullshit lie!"
Phil Lesh, Cal Expo
Top of Page Bottom of Page PermalinkFull Name: krab groad1123
on Sunday, January 30, 2022 – 06:05 pm
That movie was on late
That movie was on late Saturday morning on the Movies! network on Comcast #243. Looks like a real good sci-fi camp flick. Despite commercials, that channel runs some great science fiction/monster movies.
John Carpenter's first major film as director, Dark Star (1974), was a science-fiction comedy that he co-wrote with Dan O'Bannon (who later went on to write Alien, borrowing freely from much of Dark Star). The film reportedly cost only $60,000 and was difficult to make as both Carpenter and O'Bannon completed the film by multitasking, with Carpenter doing the musical score as well as the writing, producing, and directing, while O'Bannon acted in the film and did the special effects (which caught the attention of George Lucas who hired him to work with the special effects for the film Star Wars). Carpenter received praise for his ability to make low-budget films.
Top of Page Bottom of Page PermalinkFull Name: Thumbkinetic (Bluestnote)
on Monday, January 31, 2022 – 11:07 am
Does this place even have a
Does this place even have a motto ?
Something about dishwashers being on stage?
Top of Page Bottom of Page PermalinkFull Name: whats that irratating buzz, must bfeedback
on Monday, January 31, 2022 – 03:25 pm
I caught the very beginning
I caught the very beginning of the movie saturday. Love campy scifi so I watched the whole thing.
I thought the motto was something about socks?