70's eco-friendly space movie

The robots in the movie (called “drones”) were operated from inside by people with no legs, walking on their hands. Even though it was a silly movie, it had some good points: the spaceship didn’t look like a gleaming rocket, but like a huge industrial structure. I read that it was built using parts from hundreds of tank model kits.

They were Huey, Dewy and Louie.

The things I have occupying brain cells that could otherwise be storing something useful. :rolleyes:

Silent Running always bugged me. It always bothered me that Bruce Dern’s character (supposedly a biologist) had trouble remembering that no sunlight = no plants. Of course, the whole premise of “lets save plants by putting them on spaceships and sending them into orbit around Jupiter” never made sense to me either. (If you have the technology to create the “domes” that could support plant life in space, why not simply build the domes on the ground somewhere and avoid having to build the entire spaceship? If you can protect them from vacuum, surely you can protect them from any sort of pollution in the atmosphere?)

Did anyone ever notice that the ships from Silent Running were part of the “rag-tag fugitive fleet” in Battlestar Galactica? I think they called them the “agro-ships” there.

Major nitpick coming.

There was no Louie. They were originally just Drone 1, Drone 2 and Drone 3. Freeman Lowell (Bruce Dern) renames them later, but by that time Drone 3 (or most of him, anyway) was gone.

Actually, if I remember the scene correctly, he names Huey and Dewy then looks at the display screen showing static and says something like “we lost Louie” so he sort of names him posthumously. At any rate, it seems that he intended for the third drone to be named Louie.

I wouldn’t call it a “major” nitpick but you are correct in that the third drone did not receive the name Louie while it was still “alive”.