Murdoch investigates a death which may have been caused by a high speed travel device.Murdoch investigates a death which may have been caused by a high speed travel device.Murdoch investigates a death which may have been caused by a high speed travel device.
Photos
- Dr. Julia Ogden
- (as Hélène Joy)
- Jaya Bhola
- (as Kiri Etzkorn)
- Constable George Crabtree
- (credit only)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe character, Robert H. Goddard, asks a couple of times about building a rocket. Presumably this is more than a nod to the American engineer/physicist Robert H. Goddard who in 1926 launched the first liquid fuelled rocket. He is often regarded as the man who enabled space flight. He was ultimately responsible for over 200 patents, among which were designs for multiple stage rockets and liquid fuel propulsion.
- GoofsThe world map shown in the presentation depicts a post WW2 political situation in Europe, the borderline of the Czech Republic can be spotted for instance. In 1905, both the German Empire and Austria-Hungary shared a border with the Russian Empire. Poland and Czech Republic did not exist back then.
- Quotes
James Pendrick: [dramatic voiceover] Speed. The inverse relationship between distance and time. Since the dawn of the machine age, man has sort to increase one at the expense of the other. To do that, we need the power to accelerate. But we encounter the limit, friction. The point where the wheel meets the rail. But if we were to lift the train by the force of magnetic propulsion, and drive it forward by means of induction, then the only friction one would encounter would be the wind. And if we were take that out, our speed could be infinite. Allowing for a comfortable acceleration, we can go from New York to London in one hour. Sound impossible? Try inevitable. Frictionless. Levitated. Accelerated. Subsurface. Hypertrain. Introducing the Pendrick FLASH.
- SoundtracksMurdoch Mysteries Opening Theme
Written by Robert Carli
- GunnersMate
- Mar 27, 2018
- Permalink
Details
- Runtime44 minutes
- Color