Selasa, 03 Juli 2012

Saving Mankind With Anti Freeze Powers In Future Sci-Fi Flicks

By Alaric Sowerby


Even after the 1968 launch of the movie "Planet of the Apes", freezing compartments was a hit in sci-fi movie sets. Using dry ice, props people started the equally useful misting effect. This effect is just like smoke, except the atmosphere is colder, heavier, and clearer. Although there are many horror and science fiction films that use freezing to indicate a time lag, only one character made a powerful effect on me. His moniker is Mr. Freeze and he is Batman and Robin's certified rival. He drove me to the concept of anti freeze or possibly coolant as the hero's counter attack.

Chemical substances are generally the focus of many sci-fi movies. One particular example is "Evolution", a movie produced in 2001. It is a sci-fi comedy in which a particular shampoo chemical saved humanity. Aside from saving our world from certain tragedy, chemical substances also provide a natural excuse for humans with special powers to surface in movies. The chemical terms are usually unknown yet the formula actually works.

Now, it is high time for a really existing chemical to stand out. A chemical substance in coolant lowers the freezing level of fluids. Mixed with water, a coolant inhibits a vehicle radiator from freezing over or boiling up in regions with changing climate. It could hardly get much more genuine than that to support a story collectively. The major hero could just buy anti freeze and forestall a potential freeze villain from reviving itself. However, the storyline would have to count on a second villain.

Heroes could also soak themselves in a non-toxic coolant and become immune to the villain's freeze beam. Mr. Freeze has got signature one-liners whenever he's just about to ice his enemies. He says something such as "cool down" or "chill" then hits them using an ice rifle. For once, I'd love to see the heroes answer with a witty retort such as "anti-chill" or something like it.

We all know aliens are indifferent to earth technology. For this reason, I would wish to emphasize that coolant is made for defeating humans with chemically based ice powers only. Villains get their powers from a toxic chemical pit, lab accident, or a radioactive insect. Various chemical and scientific forces altered them all. Otherwise, they would always be normal. They'd be the onlooker on the sideline cheering for the movie hero instead.

What baffles me is the moment when fictitious heroes plummet to their end. These people always do live when a chemical bubbling in a large container jolts their fall. If the chemical was a pure, unmixed coolant, I doubt they would really survive.

An antifreeze supplier would most likely turn down the idea of individuals acquiring ultra powers out of coolant. Engine coolants are actually toxic to pets and most likely humans, also. Green or red juice may substitute the real thing in a movie. In real life, it would be a disaster worth a sci-fi storyline.




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