Wagon Train to the Stars: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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[[File:wagon.jpg|thumb|400px|[[X-Men (Comic Book)|Magneto]] takes this concept a bit too literally...]]
[[File:wagon.jpg|thumb|400px|[[X-Men (Comic Book)|Magneto]] takes this concept a bit too literally...]]


Okay, so this is my pitch: All of the characters are on a ship that travels through space, a "space" ship, if you like. Exotic locations like [[Adventure Towns]] or the [[Planet of Hats]] are just a "[[Faster-Than-Light Travel|hyperjump]]" away. It's kind of like a [[Wagon Train to the Stars]].
Okay, so this is my pitch: All of the characters are on a ship that travels through space, a "space" ship, if you like. Exotic locations like [[Adventure Towns]] or the [[Planet of Hats]] are just a "[[Faster-Than-Light Travel|hyperjump]]" away. It's kind of like a '''Wagon Train to the Stars'''.


The term comes verbatim from Gene Roddenberry's original pitch for ''[[Star Trek: The Original Series]]'' to [[NBC]] in the middle 1960s, and references the early Western show ''[[Wagon Train]]'', which was [[Exactly What It Says on the Tin|about a wagon train making its way west]]. The original is now less well known than the "...to the stars" phrase, making it an example of the [[Weird Al Effect]].
The term comes verbatim from Gene Roddenberry's original pitch for ''[[Star Trek: The Original Series]]'' to [[NBC]] in the middle 1960s, and references the early Western show ''[[Wagon Train]]'', which was [[Exactly What It Says on the Tin|about a wagon train making its way west]]. The original is now less well known than the "...to the stars" phrase, making it an example of the [[Weird Al Effect]].


Note that these shows need not necessarily take place in outer space. ''[[Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea]]'', for example, was essentially a [[Wagon Train to the Stars]] show, underwater. (so, [[Recycled in Space|recycled in the ocean?)]]
Note that these shows need not necessarily take place in outer space. ''[[Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea]]'', for example, was essentially a '''Wagon Train to the Stars''' show, underwater. (so, [[Recycled in Space|recycled in the ocean?)]]


The ship is often enough, as in [[Wagon Train]], a colonization/settlement effort that [[Failure Is the Only Option|never quite gets to its destination]], at least until the finale. If the ship has no fixed destination (''[[Doctor Who]], [[Firefly]]'') then this overlaps with [[Walking the Earth]], sharing most of the same tropes.
The ship is often enough, as in [[Wagon Train]], a colonization/settlement effort that [[Failure Is the Only Option|never quite gets to its destination]], at least until the finale. If the ship has no fixed destination (''[[Doctor Who]], [[Firefly]]'') then this overlaps with [[Walking the Earth]], sharing most of the same tropes.
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== Live-Action TV ==
== Live-Action TV ==
* ''[[Andromeda]]''
* ''[[Andromeda]]''
* ''[[Battlestar Galactica Classic]]'', which took it further by having a small 'ragtag fleet' of ships under the ''Galactica'''s protection, forming a ''literal'' [[Wagon Train to the Stars]] (well, minus the wagons anyway).
* ''[[Battlestar Galactica Classic]]'', which took it further by having a small 'ragtag fleet' of ships under the ''Galactica'''s protection, forming a ''literal'' Wagon Train to the Stars (well, minus the wagons anyway).
* The second season of ''[[Buck Rogers in The 25th Century]]''
* The second season of ''[[Buck Rogers in The 25th Century]]''
* ''[[Crusade]]''
* ''[[Crusade]]''
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[[Category:Speculative Fiction]]
[[Category:Speculative Fiction]]
[[Category:Tropes in Space]]
[[Category:Tropes in Space]]
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Wagon Train to the Stars]]

Revision as of 19:56, 14 June 2015

Magneto takes this concept a bit too literally...

Okay, so this is my pitch: All of the characters are on a ship that travels through space, a "space" ship, if you like. Exotic locations like Adventure Towns or the Planet of Hats are just a "hyperjump" away. It's kind of like a Wagon Train to the Stars.

The term comes verbatim from Gene Roddenberry's original pitch for Star Trek: The Original Series to NBC in the middle 1960s, and references the early Western show Wagon Train, which was about a wagon train making its way west. The original is now less well known than the "...to the stars" phrase, making it an example of the Weird Al Effect.

Note that these shows need not necessarily take place in outer space. Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, for example, was essentially a Wagon Train to the Stars show, underwater. (so, recycled in the ocean?)

The ship is often enough, as in Wagon Train, a colonization/settlement effort that never quite gets to its destination, at least until the finale. If the ship has no fixed destination (Doctor Who, Firefly) then this overlaps with Walking the Earth, sharing most of the same tropes.

Compare Space Western, Space Opera.

Examples of Wagon Train to the Stars include:

Anime and Manga

  • Galaxy Express 999. Bonus point for having the main characters travel in an ACTUAL space train.
  • Macross aka Robotech features this in a way when Macross City is rescued after a "space fold" accident and housed in the titular ship; the successor TV shows, Macross 7 and Macross Frontier take place on actual, literal stellar wagon trains (complete with collapsible roofs) intended to colonize planets.
  • SF Saiyuki Starzinger (dubbed as "Spaceketeers" in the US), a sci fi retelling of the classic Asian story Journey to the West (Saiyuki) does this as well (the dub however, changes the Saiyuki references to Three Musketeers references).


Literature

  • Robert A. Heinlein's Tunnel in the Sky has interstellar colonization by means of quite literal wagon trains, using artificial gateways to get to their destination planets. They're not the focus of the book, but twice we see wagon trains preparing to embark.
  • In Melanie Rawn's unfinished Exiles trilogy, colonists from Earth find a new home in another solar system. Rawn named their spaceship after the actual wagon one of her ancestors rode out West.
  • Star Wars has a evil version. the Yuuzhan Vong. They're from another galaxy, and had to travel millions of light-years at slower then light speed. They came in a HUGE fleet.
    • So huge, in fact, that the novels created a Retcon stating that the primary reason the Empire constructed the Death Star and its other superweapons was to use them against the Yuuzhan Vong. The fact that they could be used to enforce their rule through fear and to fight the Rebellion was merely a bonus.


Live-Action TV

Video Games

Western Animation