M Holmes wrote:
> In rec.arts.sf.movies Tim Bruening <tsbrueni@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> > I saw "The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe" (based on the book by
C.S.
> > Lewis) on Sunday. Spoilers below:
>
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>
> > In this movie, 4 kids, named Lucy, Susan, Edmund, and Peter go through
a
> > wardrobe into a land called "Narnia". It is ruled by the cruel White
> > Witch, whose spell has kept it in winter mode for 100 years. The
kids,
> > along with the noble lion Aslan, must free Narnia from the White
Witch.
>
> > It has been winter for 100 years. How have the life forms of Narnia
> > survived? I would expect that the grass, flowers, and fruit would not
> > grow in the snow. This would cause the herbivores, bees, and birds to
> > starve, which would wipe out the animals that feed on herbivores,
birds,
> > and bees.
>
> They're Intelligently Designed to adapt and eat snow.
>
> > Granted, Narnia's animals seem to be as smart as Earth
> > humans
>
> Pah. They don't even have Ipods.
>
> > but I don't see how they could practice farming in all that
> > snow.
>
> The beavers built giant dams and everything was run on ecologically
> correct hydro power. This was used to heat the off-screen greenhouses.
But the frozen water would not have flowed over the dams! The rivers and
lakes were completely frozen!


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