Was the Star Trek 4 Ent-A bridge a redress of the Excelsior bridge?

Discussion in 'Star Trek Movies I-X' started by Aldo, Sep 20, 2013.

  1. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    Re: Was the Star Trek 4 Ent-A bridge a redress of the Excelsior bridge

    Well, at the time, it was the only one, so the definite article made sense. Remember, this was just a year after the release of Superman: The Movie. These days it's known mainly as just Superman, so people forget that was its full title.
     
  2. Lance

    Lance Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Re: Was the Star Trek 4 Ent-A bridge a redress of the Excelsior bridge

    Chalk me up as another one who quite likes the clean look of the Ent-A bridge as seen at the end of TVH. Only a shame we didn't get to see more of it.
     
  3. Mycroft Maxwell

    Mycroft Maxwell Lieutenant Commander Red Shirt

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    Re: Was the Star Trek 4 Ent-A bridge a redress of the Excelsior bridge

    Thats a pretty good point. XD
     
  4. starburst

    starburst Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    Re: Was the Star Trek 4 Ent-A bridge a redress of the Excelsior bridge

    Between TMP and WOK bridges I prefer TMP mainly because of the chairs before the WOK covers (which were used on the Reliant, Ent-A as well as the Stargazer).

    The layout and design from TFF is my favourite, but if I could I would tweak it with the details from TUC just keeping the layout.
     
  5. MakeshiftPython

    MakeshiftPython Commodore Commodore

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    Re: Was the Star Trek 4 Ent-A bridge a redress of the Excelsior bridge

    I prefer the TUC of all the bridges in every Trek. The only thing I don't like though is the reverting back to switches and dials after TFF introduced Okudagrams of the 23rd century. Meyer should have just sucked his gut in and not indulge too much on putting 20th century touches.
     
  6. trevanian

    trevanian Rear Admiral

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    Re: Was the Star Trek 4 Ent-A bridge a redress of the Excelsior bridge

    So would that make the E-B your ideal bridge?

    BTW, your username is very familiar ... python - makeshift python.
     
  7. Hober Mallow

    Hober Mallow Commodore Commodore

    Re: Was the Star Trek 4 Ent-A bridge a redress of the Excelsior bridge

    I see Nick Meyer's Trek as something separate from every other vision of Trek. Did pink Klingon blood bother you? :)
     
  8. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    Re: Was the Star Trek 4 Ent-A bridge a redress of the Excelsior bridge

    The pink blood wasn't Meyer's vision; it was a compromise he had to make to avoid an R rating. Given how gore-soaked TWOK was, he clearly didn't have a problem with red blood. But the microgravity blood drops floating around in TUC were too shocking for the MPAA, so the only way they'd give it a PG rating was if he changed it to a less bloodlike color.
     
  9. trevanian

    trevanian Rear Admiral

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    Re: Was the Star Trek 4 Ent-A bridge a redress of the Excelsior bridge

    ^I don't know why you'd be choosing to perpetuate that myth about the ratings, when it has been talked to death so many times here it isn't remotely funny.

    The blood color was always a plot point (excised in the theatrical release), pointing up the Khitomer would-be assassin's true nature.

    It was never about ratings. The ILM guys even said as much, that they'd have needed Peckinpah-volume gore to get an R-rating, regardless of color.

    This rating thing seems to always go back to a Rick Berman COMMUNICATOR quote, and he is hardly the source of authenticity for a film he was only peripherally involved with.

    In recent years, there has been a lot of retcon / print the legend revisionism about this (I think Meyer is guilty of it too), but the pink blood to avoid R rating biz is just horseshit, plain and simple.

    Why anybody thinks the MPAA would rate something a certain way BASED ON A SHOT DESCRIPTION IN A SCRIPT -- when they rate movies, not screenplays -- also begs explanation.
     
  10. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    Re: Was the Star Trek 4 Ent-A bridge a redress of the Excelsior bridge

    ^Oh, sorry, I didn't know that.
     
  11. Mark_Nguyen

    Mark_Nguyen Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Re: Was the Star Trek 4 Ent-A bridge a redress of the Excelsior bridge

    The Excelsior in TUC also had an LCARS-only bridge. I think the distinction is that a) Meyer likes physical switches, and b) the Excelsior was more advanced. Doesn't really explain why they regressed between V and VI, though... The E-A was suffering multiple computer systems failures, so Scotty swapped some of the systems to older versions to take the load off the ol' M-4 computer. Yeah, that's it.

    Mark
     
  12. MakeshiftPython

    MakeshiftPython Commodore Commodore

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    Re: Was the Star Trek 4 Ent-A bridge a redress of the Excelsior bridge

    The E-B looks more like the Excelsior in TUC, with the master display system in the back and such. I very much prefer the layout of the E-A.

    Correct.
     
  13. Hober Mallow

    Hober Mallow Commodore Commodore

    Re: Was the Star Trek 4 Ent-A bridge a redress of the Excelsior bridge

    Maybe... but I remember reading about it way back in '91 even before the movie came out. Correct or incorrect, it's not revisionism -- it goes all the way back to the beginning -- and I don't think it had anything to do with Rick Berman.
     
  14. Workbee

    Workbee Commander Red Shirt

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    Re: Was the Star Trek 4 Ent-A bridge a redress of the Excelsior bridge

    One problem is that they had to set up a contrast with the "more futuristic TNG". Yes, looking at the movies on their own, it doesn't make much sense for the Helm to regress back to buttons and switches after touchpads. But by then the touchpad LCARS had become sort of a signature element of the 24th century tech, that I understand a desire to differentiate the 23rd century tech from it. If anything, I wish that they had switches all the way though. However it must be noted that the touchpads were first introduced in TVH (except for certain limited applications in prior films).

    If anything, the TFF was a misstep forward, taking the aesthetic too close to TNG when we saw various ships from intermediary periods bore no resemblance to either the TFF or TNG interiors.
     
  15. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    Re: Was the Star Trek 4 Ent-A bridge a redress of the Excelsior bridge

    ^It's worth remembering that, as sleek and futuristic as the Okudagram control surfaces look, their main virtue was that they were really, really easy and inexpensive to make -- you just print up some transparencies and backlight them. So maybe it was a budgetary decision to use them in TFF rather than a purely aesthetic one.
     
  16. Maurice

    Maurice Snagglepussed Admiral

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    Re: Was the Star Trek 4 Ent-A bridge a redress of the Excelsior bridge

    From Meyer's memoir, years after the fact.
     
  17. trevanian

    trevanian Rear Admiral

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    Re: Was the Star Trek 4 Ent-A bridge a redress of the Excelsior bridge

    I'd be interested in seeing where you saw it back then. It wasn't in my CINEFEX piece or the CINEFANTASTIQUE coverage. Then again, those appeared after the film came out, and I'd imagine anything floating around about klingon blood color that appeared in print BEFORE the film's release would have been sheer speculation, not weighed down by facts or gravity boots.

    (an example of the latter was when someone I worked with at a software production facility in Fremont insisted that the Klingons getting killed on Praxis were the result of a reshoot in the south Bay Area, between San Jose and Santa Cruz, a story I heard well before thanksgiving. As far as I know that was always BS, but there were a few folks shot on a big sheet of white material on a beach in Frisco for the establishing shot on the klingon prison planet.)
     
  18. Maurice

    Maurice Snagglepussed Admiral

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    Re: Was the Star Trek 4 Ent-A bridge a redress of the Excelsior bridge

    You mean this shot?
     
  19. starburst

    starburst Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    Re: Was the Star Trek 4 Ent-A bridge a redress of the Excelsior bridge

    I may be wrong but I am sure some of the Excelsior consoles also had switches, its been a while since I last saw the film but I think you see the Helm station has buttons etc when they are riding out the shockwave.
     
  20. BillJ

    BillJ The King of Kings Premium Member

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    Re: Was the Star Trek 4 Ent-A bridge a redress of the Excelsior bridge

    Yeah. I'm thinking you're right.