Jump to content

The Martian third listed on "most mistakes"


Kerbart

Recommended Posts

In my experience most of the mistakes listed on that site are continuity. That can of coke was facing west in one shot and south west in the next. Most 'factual', plot hole, ect, mistakes are left up to 'movie logic'.

Edited by Frybert
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Also the martian would be held to a higher standard for factual accuracy, since it is a near-future hard sci-fi movie. Actual Spoiler Below, watch out. 

Spoiler

one of the errors had to do with bolts floating around in the capsule while the second stage engine is firing during watneys ascent to the hermes. They should be floating around in the capsule. In a less realistic movie, say star trek, the pulse engines they use to move between planets would move them so fast everyone would be turned into tomato paste from being slammed against the back of the wall.

Also, @Frybert, I like your profile pick ;)

Edited by peachoftree
Link to comment
Share on other sites

It relies on user submissions, so interest or lack thereof will bias things too. The "most mistakes" overall are in old films where people have gone through with a fine-toothed comb looking for tiny errors.

As for The Martian, it's a mix of "continuity mistakes" and "factual errors", but several of the claimed factual errors are themselves making big assumptions.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

29 minutes ago, parameciumkid said:

No spoilers meant, but The Force Awakens is going to blow it out of the water as far as science mistakes are concerned ;P

Why would anyone even bother checking for science mistakes on TFA? I can understand it for movies that are meant to be realistic like The Martian, but it would be a major waste of time to science check Star Wars movies and movies like them. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I saw Spectre the other day, and I can't count the number of errors in it. It has such an abundance of the classic unrealistic aspects that the 007 franchise is famous for. I'm not talking about jetpacks or submarine cars, I'm talking about the 

Spoiler

Hello Mr. Bond, I'm your nemesis. Would you like a cup of tea while I explain my evil plan? And after your inevitable escape, please follow my trap exactly as I instruct, and don't take anything more powerful than a pistol with you. Because reasons. By the way, did you know my helicopter is so reliable that it can always escape in less than 3 minutes? As long as you don't shoot it, of course.

stuff.

Edited by Maxwell Comp
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1. If a thin plastic bag is enough to withstand against the dynamic pressure - why install that heavy nose cone at all?
They could take several bags of potatoes more - instead of the nosecone.
And btw use those bags to cover the MAV when the potatoe has been eaten.

2. If he just puts a potatoe into the feces, no potatoes should grow, because it would be burnt due to the decay heat.
Any feces must be first totally rotten into compost, and only when the decay stopped, this becomes a fertilizer.

3. Watney's RTG heat power is 1500 W - as a powered clothes iron, and it's still enough to keep a bath of water hot.
Why the RTG wasn't molten down or at least red hot when it was buried into the ground?
Try to hide a powered clothes iron beneath a seat and feel the difference.
Probably, Mark could bake his potatoes above that place, but he was wrapped up in his thoughts and lost that opportunity.

4. When Hermes released the air, dV = 29 m/s.
Air molecules velocity U = sqrt(3 * 8.3144 * (273 + 20) / 29e-3) = 500 m/s.

dV = U * ln(M/(M-m));
M/(M-m) = exp(dV/U);
(M-m)/M = exp(-dV/U);
1-m/M = exp(-dV/U);
m/M = 1-exp(-dV/U) = 1-exp(-29/500) = 0.056;

Per every 1000 kg of Hermes:
Air mass = 0.056 * 1000 = 56 kg.
Air volume = 56/1.225e-3 ~= 45000 m^3.
Average Hermes density ~= 1000 kg / 45000 m^3 = 0.02 kg/m3.
Hermes is 50k times lighter than water and 16 times heavier than air. It's a space zeppelin.

Edited by kerbiloid
Link to comment
Share on other sites

There's also the contradicting airlock incident I made a big stink about when the movie first came out. It was described as the stressed fabric of the airlock failing. And yet the airlock remained somewhat intact ( in the book anyway. Iirc it was destroyed in the movie. ) and the Habs fabric is what failed. 

Contradicts Weir's description of the failure.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On ‎20‎/‎12‎/‎2015 at 5:53 PM, Robotengineer said:

Why would anyone even bother checking for science mistakes on TFA?

That's exactly why I think The Martian is third: who'd nitpick anything else for scientific acurateness?

Ant-man: "Whole premise is stupid". There, need anything else?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This thread is quite old. Please consider starting a new thread rather than reviving this one.

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...