The Orville?What ship did the kessel run in 12 parsecs?
Film makers don't know that.Are you sure this question is correct? A parsec is a unit of distance not time.
It wasn’t the Orville.The Orville?
You’re correct, it was a mistake in the film. I’m not sure if it was deliberate or not.Are you sure this question is correct? A parsec is a unit of distance not time.
It was indeed the Millennium Falcon.The millennium falcon!
Why thank you…the geek is strong in me.It wasn’t the Orville.
You’re correct, it was a mistake in the film. I’m not sure if it was deliberate or not.
It was indeed the Millennium Falcon.
As @GRALISTAIR pointed out a parsec is a unit of distance, so quite what Han Solo’s claim was, nobody knows!
The floor is yours.
You’re correct, it was a mistake in the film. I’m not sure if it was deliberate or not.
I must rewatch the film.It wasn't a mistake.
Han Solo was boasting about the capabilities of the Millenium Falcon and the fact its navigation computer could come up with the fastest route ever for the Kessel run, which is normally a 20 parsec journey.
That only makes sense if it found the shortest, rather than fastest, route.It wasn't a mistake.
Han Solo was boasting about the capabilities of the Millenium Falcon and the fact its navigation computer could come up with the fastest route ever for the Kessel run, which is normally a 20 parsec journey.
Was he the Green Cross Code chap?By what name is Derrick Evans MBE better know?
No. Wasn’t that David prowse? (Of star wars fame)Was he the Green Cross Code chap?
I've read that the original script intended for Han to be boasting and inventing claims, and for Obi-Wan Kenobi to respond with an incredulous glance. Alec Guinness didn't quite manage to convey this in the final cut, so it made no sense to filmgoers either.It wasn't a mistake.
Han Solo was boasting about the capabilities of the Millenium Falcon and the fact its navigation computer could come up with the fastest route ever for the Kessel run, which is normally a 20 parsec journey.
What ship did the kessel run in 12 parsecs?Novelisations and subsequent books rationalised the line with the above explanation that you give. Part of the story was that there were several black holes around Kessel, and finding a route as short as twenty parsecs (skirting so close to oblivion) was really quite something.
Is that Mr Motivator?Why thank you…the geek is strong in me.
By what name is Derrick Evans MBE better know?
It is! The legendary 90s morning tv fitness icon!Is that Mr Motivator?
Who wrote the novel "Something Wicked This Way Comes"?Open floor please
Quite right, your turn...Ray Bradbury?
Madagascar?
A leprechaun?I remembered that you are a fan of Flashman and it half-confirmed something at the back of my mind.
What rather unusual feature would you find on Broom Bridge (also known as Broome or Brougham Bridge) over the Royal Canal in north-west Dublin?
A leprechaun?
Neither: it is rather more permanent, having been there since 16 October 1843.A fishing rod rest.