Bit of a technical point, but I've been pondering the physics of the Juggernaut ram/crash scene since I first saw it. The Juggernaut presumably weighs quite a lot, and seemed to crash pretty hard onto the ground. It doesn't deform much if at all, so most of the kinetic energy must go into the ground.
Now, with the ground being as pebbly (or silica shardy) as it is, I'd expect an impact of that order to have a sort of fragmentation grenade effect. The humans on the ground were lucky not to get hit!
I've been wondering whether a nod to this in the form of a near miss, pretty much the 'being narrowly missed by a bullet' effect cinematically, might have been nice. Then again I'm not sure how clear it would have been to people who don't obsess over the physics of movie scenes. :)
Now, with the ground being as pebbly (or silica shardy) as it is, I'd expect an impact of that order to have a sort of fragmentation grenade effect. The humans on the ground were lucky not to get hit!
I've been wondering whether a nod to this in the form of a near miss, pretty much the 'being narrowly missed by a bullet' effect cinematically, might have been nice. Then again I'm not sure how clear it would have been to people who don't obsess over the physics of movie scenes. :)