
Tuesday October 25, 2005
Star Wars museum exhibit
I visited a preview of the "Star Wars: Where Science Meets
Imagination" at the Museum of Science in Boston, on Sunday, October 23, 2005. It was okay. The exhibit
was smaller and somewhat disappointing when compared to the previous
Lord of the Rings exhibit. There weren't as many movie props to see.
On a more positive note, this exhibit contained more science and
educational content. http://starwars.mos.org/
Visiting Tips
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The exhibit is on the second floor of the Red Wing. The stairs to the
exhibit are just past the food court.
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You need to purchase timed tickets to the exhibit. Entrance times are
every 15 minutes. Adult tickets are $20. Exhibit admission includes
a separate ticket for entrance to the rest of the museum which can be
used anytime within six months of purchase.
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You can go upstairs to wait in line at the exhibit
entrance 15 minutes before your entry time.
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It is possible for the entire day's supply of tickets to sell out, so
you may want to pre-purchase.
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Once you enter the exhibit, you can stay as long as you want.
However, if you leave then you cannot re-enter. I'd plan to stay
about two hours.
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Strollers, food and drink, and bags are not allowed inside the exhibit.
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Yes, cameras and photography are allowed in the exhibit!
About the Exhibit
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There is a Robot Theater inside the exhibit. It is a 15-minute video
and animatronics show. The show capacity is about 35, making it
something you'll need to wait in line to see. My feeling is that this
show is worth waiting for, though hopefully you won't have to wait
more than 30 minutes.
-
Like all museum exhibits, this one exits through a gift shop, this one
with various Star Wars merchandise. Except for the companion book,
none of the gift shop merchandise is related to the exhibit. (I had
been hoping that there might be exhibit t-shirts or posters.)
-
Costumes on display: Chewbacca, Darth Vader, Obi-Wan Kenobi, Padme, assorted Wookies, Tusken Raider, Jawa, C-3PO and R2-D2, Yoda, Storm Trooper, Wampa.
-
Models on display: Millennium Falcon, various other spaceships, full-size Landspeeder, Droideka, Battle Droid, Star Destroyer, Tie Fighter, Sebulba's Pod Racer, Blockade Runner, AT-AT and other Empire armored transport vehicles, Wookie tree miniature, Jawa Sandcrawler.
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Props on display: various Lightsabers, various Blasters, Thermonuclear Detonator, Medical Droids, Anakin's prosthetic arm, Luke's prosthetic arm, Darth Vader's mask.
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Science featured in the exhibit: Abiocor heart, Roomba, Robosapien, artificial skin, proposed "real" spacecraft (rambus engines, antimatter rockets, etc.), cold weather clothing, prosthetics and cybernetics, Maglev technology, Braingate cortical implant, C-leg prosthetic leg, Boston Digital Arm, exploring cold climates, exploring the forest canopy, living in desert worlds, robot vision, robot balance.
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Activities inside the exhibit: drive a small hovercraft, Maglev engineering lab, robot vision demonstration, robot design lab, virtual community game with augmented reality, a 2-wheeled robot that could balance itself.
Multimedia Tour
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There's an audiovisual Multimedia Tour that you can purchase. The
price for adults is $5.
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The Multimedia Tour is free for visitors with hearing or visual impairments.
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The Multimedia Tour is basically a Toshiba PocketPC device with
headphones. The device has a touchscreen which is the way you
interact with the device. Certain exhibits have a number, and you can
enter the number on the device for an additional audio track.
-
The device comes with a lanyard for you to wear around your neck as
you walk throughout the exhibit. You pick up the device just outside
of the exhibit entrance upstairs, and you return it just in front of
the exhibit exit.
-
There are only 22 exhibits that have a Multimedia Tour track. Some of
these tracks lead to additional sub-tracks.
-
Though touted as "multimedia", most of the Multimedia Tour tracks are
audio-only. There are only a few video clips and still images. The
video clips were difficult to hear-- the volume is softer than the
audio tracks.
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There is some sort of bookmarking feature which will allow you to
send content via email. I didn't try this feature.
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My overall impression of the Multimedia Tour is that it might not be
worth it. There just isn't that much content available for the device.
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If you do get the Multimedia Tour, I advise not using it at the
beginning of your visit. There are a lot of other things to see,
videos to watch, etc., and your time might be better spent with these
before listening to the Multimedia Tour. Where the Multimedia Tour
comes in handy is for killing time in line for Robot Theatre.
Millennium Falcon ride
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There's an upcharge Millennium Falcon simulator ride (not a motion
ride, I believe-- just audiovisual). Unfortunately, I wasn't able to
get tickets for this.
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You'll need to buy timed tickets for this ride. Tickets are $5.
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My impression is that
the ride has a low capacity and that tickets might sell out quickly.
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The simulator is on the ground floor of the Red Wing, near the stairs
to the Star Wars exhibit.
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Apparently, the ride comes with a souvenir pin.
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