I went to see Serenity last night, and while I didn't feel it was up to the standards of the TV series (how could it be, with only a couple of hours to do all the character development and plot structure) it wasn't as bad as I had feared it might be.
However, I think there was a departure from reality in one place...
There were quite a
lot of Reiver ships surrounding the planet Miranda. (Run and hide, Tony -- we're about to venture into (are you ready for this?) math!)
Lets assume that the Reiver ships were in low orbit around Miranda -- say, 200 miles above the surface of a planet about the size of Earth. Let's further assume that the Reiver ships were spaced 500 feet apart (about a tenth of a mile). They certainly seemed to be literally brushing rockets to tailfins! And finally, lets assume that Mal and his intrepid crew had to pass through a mile of wall to wall Reiver ships to get through the blockade.
Well... a sphere 8,400 miles in diameter (Earth diameter plus 200 miles above the surface on each side) would encompass a volume of about 310,338,826,560 cubic miles.
A sphere 8402 miles in diameter (Earth diameter plus 200 miles above the surface on each side, plus one mile through the blockade on each side of the sphere) would encompass a volume of 310,560,549,932 cubic miles. Subracting the volume of the smaller sphere from the larger leaves 221,723,372 cubic miles taken up by the Reivers.
If the Reivers are spaced 500 feet apart, there would be 1,178 Reiver ships in every cubic mile of space in the blockade zone surrounding the planet. That means there would be 261,190,132,216 Reiver ships. If each ship had a crew of 10 Reivers, that means there would be about two and a half trillion Reivers.
It does not seem plausible that 2.5 trillion Reivers could support themselves by the expedient of occasional raiding parties on small (<1000 inhabitants?) colonial outposts.
It does not seem plausible that even under the most optimal conditions, that an initial planetary population of 30 million people, of which 99.8% died due to the effects of the drug administered through the air handlers, leaving only 60,000 Reivers to begin with, could be fruitful and multiply and increase their population by a factor of more than 40,000,000 in, ummm, what timeframe are we dealing with here? It's only been six years since the end of the secession wars, and the "experiment" would have happened after that. So, say 5 years. Even with cloning and forced maturation, I don't see it happening. Each original Reiver would have to produce about four and a half million clones, or put another way, about eight clones every minute, 24 hours a day, for five years.
So, I guess the question is this: Was Serenity a true documentary, or was it a work of fiction and imagination? My research would tend to support the latter.
tanstaafl.