Sci-fi: Space Travel
Sci-fi: Time Travel
Sci-fi: Aliens
Fantasy
The Hobbit
100

TV Show about the crew of the Starship Enterprise exploring space.

Star Trek

100

TV show about an alien who travels through time with their human "Companions."

Doctor Who

100

Radio broadcast about an alien invasion that caused panic when Americans mistook it for a real attack.

The War of the Worlds

100

Fantasy subgenre where characters travel from the "real world" to a magical world.

Portal fantasy

100

Race of magical beings who live in the woods and have historically feuded with dwarves.

elves

200

What happens to the teenager Marilyn at the end of "The Cold Equations?"

She dies

200

The names of the two species of future humans in The Time Machine (both answers required for full points).

Eloi and Morlocks

200

Klaatu warns humans about using this technology in The Day the Earth Stood Still.

nuclear weapons/technology

200

A universal character type, idea, or symbol that appears in stories across many different cultures/time periods.

archetype

200

Animals who are friends with Gandalf and rescue him and the dwarves from wolves.

eagles

300

"The Doomsday Machine" warns viewers about the dangers of this element of Cold War conflict.

Military escalation/arms races

300

The name for a deeply flawed or imperfect fictional society, such as the one portrayed in The Time Machine.

dystopia

300

The aliens in War of the Worlds are from this planet.

Mars

300

Fantasy subgenre that includes darker themes and often incorporates elements of horror.

Dark fantasy
300

Ability granted by Gollum/Bilbo's magic ring.

invisibility
400

In "The Cold Equations," why does Barton believe that Marilyn's parents will hate him?

They are from Earth and do not understand the dangers of space travel

400

Type of paradox in which objects or information are never created because they are brought from the future into the past.

Bootstrap paradox
400

Type of alien story in which aliens seek to befriend and understand humans.

beneficial

400

This is an archetypal story pattern that shows a good-aligned character's growth, victory, and transformation.

hero's journey

400

Villain who represents the destructive power of greed.

Smaug

500

Give ONE possible reason why the creators of Star Trek may have chosen to use a sci-fi setting to address real-world problems.

Multiple answers: possibly to make it less controversial, keep people interested in the story, reach a wider audience

500

The author of The Time Machine and The War of the Worlds.

H.G. Wells

500

Stories about aliens attacking Earth are often allegories for this.

Foreign invasion

500

In The Empire Strikes Back, this archetype is represented when Luke loses his hand in a lightsaber battle.

incurable wound

500

Character who slays Smaug and attempts to claim treasure for his people.

Bard (the Bowman)