Wasn't his son such a pansy?
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UtopianUK — 16 years ago(March 12, 2010 02:40 PM)
The kid did spoil things a bit, because he didn't come across as heart-warming - more like irritating and babyish. He wasn't convincing; I don't think any kid acts like that. All the "mommy" "daddy" "I love you daddy" - was too sugary and nauseating.
Any normal kid of that age wants to be taken seriously, so has grown up a bit, and would just say "Mom & Dad" and would hopefully not be sooo mushy.
I guess the writer didn't have a good grasp of what kids are like. Maybe he wanted the kid to appear lovable, but definitely got it all wrong. I would have made the kid more normal - more like you'd expect Connery's kid to be like. -
dchipman — 16 years ago(March 31, 2010 10:14 PM)
I would have to disagree with most of you. The kid was an immature little whimp because where he had grown-up The parents may have been fine, but the environment on a space outpost is probably a bad place to raise a kid (it's too dangerous a place for a kid to grow-up normally).
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jstang411 — 15 years ago(July 26, 2010 10:45 AM)
Perhaps they were trying to puncuate the point to Connery and us that the kid needed his father. Otherwise he'd grow up without Connery showing him how to be Connery and use the Mom as his role model instead.
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jstang411 — 15 years ago(August 25, 2010 12:25 PM)
Putting this into the future, keep in mind that accents are going away. Regional ones in the U.S. have been coming less pronounced for decades. My guess is that will happen to international ones as well as time goes by (if it hasn't already).
Blame it on TV.
Sweetly innocent and obviously cloistered in space for a long time with no contact with many of his age.