अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंHumanity must resume its war against the Martians when they revive after decades of hibernation following their defeat in the 1950s.Humanity must resume its war against the Martians when they revive after decades of hibernation following their defeat in the 1950s.Humanity must resume its war against the Martians when they revive after decades of hibernation following their defeat in the 1950s.
- पुरस्कार
- कुल 1 नामांकन
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
This must be the creepiest sci-fi horror show/movie ever. I was 10 years old when I first saw it. Now, 21 years later, I still have nightmares.
The reason may be the complete lack of human emotions within the aliens. No empathy whatsoever for human life. The aliens are portrayed as total different from us - not "almost human/American" like in other sci-fi shows. These ones cannot be reasoned with. You cannot negotiate with them.
Three episodes moved me deeply.
1.Quinn. "no Harrison...you are the alien".
2.The abducted woman. The end scene when Harrison just being to late to rescue her. It gave me an incredible parallel with my own life. Being to late to save the most loved one person in my life.
3.The strong drug. The scene with humans collecting drugs from the floor. Acting as animals.
The only flaw with the show is its low budget. Imagine what it could have been with a modern show's budget.
And one more thing. WOW is no predecessor to "X-files". X-files is a cheesy, unrealistic show with vampires, werewolves, and baseball-loving aliens. YES! Baseball-loving aliens. Give me a break...
WOW is the real deal. With real human emotions. With real characters. With a real nightmare-plot. Great job! GREAT!
Eight stars for effort on this series.
It was a shame that the series did not capitalize on the episode, "Angel of Death". The unexpected, ironic, and somewhat twisted humorous ending would have made for a much more interesting second season had the original plot line been followed. As it was, some viewers, including myself, disliked the second season's post-apocalyptic setting and stopped watching the series.
I present here my own speculative analysis of the aliens from Mortax, for anyone curious enough to read on.
Most likely the inhabitants of Mortax originated from a tightly controlled, rigid, caste-driven society. The upper caste was smug in its superiority over the lower caste classes, even those presumably of a high class, such as scientists. The ruling caste or upper classes which ruled Mortax probably were probably a hereditary class which may or may not have included a military class as a subsidiary upper caste.
At some point in its history, the lower caste classes of Mortax gained political power enough not to overthrow the current ruling caste but enough to gain comparable political parity and most importantly, respect.
As a result of this paradigm shift in Mortax civilization, the upper ruling class now had to address the lower classes with respect. They now called the lower classes, 'comrades'. The lower classes could now address their heretofore upper caste rulers as, 'advocates', not, sir, ma'am, majesty, excellency, highness, lord, mistress, or any other such title conferring superiority over the claimant and inferiority over the one saying it. But it is very clear from the comments of the often frustrated Advocate triumvirate that the bigotry of the upper castes over the lower castes is still very much alive. But now it is politically incorrect to say so in front of them.
Mortax civilization was now unified and moreover, unified in its new, overriding goal, the salvation of its race, civilization, and culture. Unfortunately, the smug racial superiority and bigotry of the upper caste were now subsumed by all of Mortax society. The new inferior class fit only for extinction were the humans of earth. The invasion of earth is an invasion to humans. For Mortaxians, it is a 'colonisation' of a habitable planet regrettably infested with inferior biological sentients called humans whose existence is expendable. The invasion is a fight to the death for all of humanity.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाOriginally, Paramount had conceived the series not as a sequel or for television, but a feature remake of The War of the Worlds (1953) with George A. Romero slated to direct.
- गूफ़Throughout the entire first season, the aliens are preoccupied with finding their hibernating comrades, and only twice do they ever discuss getting a hold of the original warships from the 1953 invasion. However, Dr. Harrison Blackwood says in the pilot episode that there were thousands of ships warehoused by the military after the invasion, and it would only take the aliens getting a hold of one of them to wipe out humanity. It seems odd then that the aliens never make this a priority.
- भाव
Harrison Blackwood: In 1953 Earth experienced a War of the Worlds. Common bacteria destroyed the aliens but it didn't kill them. The aliens fell into a state of deep hibernation. Now the aliens have been resurrected more terrifying than before. In 1953 aliens started taking over the world. Today they're taking over our bodies.
- क्रेज़ी क्रेडिटA mysterious credit that appears at the end of all episodes from Season One is for "The Far Side" cartoons by Gary Larson, courtesy of Chronicle Features. It's unclear why this credit appears since there is no evidence of the cartoon's use or even a reference throughout the show. It is because in an early episode, a Larson cartoon appears on a bulletin board in a shot and the credits were not changed after that episode.
- इसके अलावा अन्य वर्जनThe animation of the alien hand taking a hold of Earth that opens every episode in the first season is omitted on the DVDs.
- कनेक्शनFollows The War of the Worlds (1953)