Ad Astra

Ad Astra (2019)

1 corrected entry

(7 votes)

Corrected entry: Cepheus is moving at immense speeds to make the journey at the speed it does. But despite the great speed, it seems to have no problem slowing down on a whim for a mayday, then speeding up again to get to Mars. And if it's got that much power on hand, what are all the solar panels for?

Correction: Assumptions about the limitations of an imaginary technology don't constitute a mistake. The ship is able to do these things because it supports the plot and is totally consistent within the film. As for solar panels, who knows? My car has a 120 horse power engine, why does it need a battery?

Your car needs the battery to engage the starter. Nothing to do with power.

Exactly. Perhaps the solar panels are there to charge batteries to power the ship when the engines are off.

Factual error: It is not possible that Pitt could have gone up to the ship when it was already blasting off. There was literally fire in the tunnel.

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Suggested correction: It was a bit confusing, but what I saw was a shower of sparks or hot particles and some fumes, and no fire in the tunnel until he was through the hatch. The makers may have been influenced by seeing vapour prior to a rocket launch, and then some rockets use a shower of electric sparks to ignite the engines. It was implausible, but no fire in the tunnel.

More mistakes in Ad Astra

Roy McBride: Can I have a blanket and pillow?
Flight Attendant: Certainly, that will be $125.

More quotes from Ad Astra

Trivia: When Roy McBride is reviewing a top-secret message regarding his father and the LIMA mission, the message filename is "6EQUJ5," which is a very obscure easter egg in the movie. The filename 6EQUJ5 refers to the real-life "WOW Signal," a deep space radio signal received by the Big Ear radio telescope at Ohio State University in 1977. The alpha-numeric designation "6EQUJ5" was a printed readout of the signal's duration and intensity. This signal lasted 72 seconds and was 20 times stronger than background radio noise, causing a surprised astronomer to circle the printed 6EQUJ5 readout in red ink and make the handwritten notation "WOW!" in the margin. While the signal was an anomalous one-time event that was never repeated, and there is still no proof that 6EQUJ5 was alien in origin, it has stimulated debate about extraterrestrial radio signals for decades. Ironically, the movie "Ad Astra" concludes that there are no alien radio signals and that we really are alone in the universe.

Charles Austin Miller

More trivia for Ad Astra

Question: The Lima produces surges that disrupt electronics. Why isn't the Lima affected?

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