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| Star Trek - Original Series The one that started it all... |
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#1 |
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Vice Admiral
Location: Fort Dodge, IA
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TOS in High-Def?
It brings to mind a few questions I have regarding whether the show is being presented in high-def. This is the first time I have watched the show on a high definition television set, and the picture looks great! Was the image restored for the 2005 DVD release, or is this something that was done for the blu ray release? I'm not a fan of the CGI effects. Does anybody know why most of the space effects were replaced with what is, by today's standards, very cheap looking CGI? I can understand offering an enhanced effects version, similar to the original Star Wars, but the show should be preserved in it's original form as well. Is the series available on DVD with the original effects? One thing I have noticed about the show in high-def is the number of details that were obviously not noticeable in the show's original broadcast. Of course, for years it has been easy to spot stunt doubles in nearly every fight as their faces are far more easily identifiable today than on a 1960's television set. In one episode I was looking at back-lit screens above the bridge stations and noticed on all of them that the transparencies were warped and on the verge of peeling off! Of course, this isn't something that was ever meant to be visible on television. Has anybody else noticed such oddities that were not visible before? Or is there a site I could be referred to that explores them further? |
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#2 |
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Lieutenant Commander
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Re: TOS in High-Def?
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#3 | |||
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Captain
Location: USS Berlin
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Re: TOS in High-Def?
I'm just not sure if CBS used that same HD master for their disc releases on HD-DVD and Blu-ray or made a new one.
As for the cheap looking CGI I don't have the answer (the CGI matte paintings for the landscapes, however, are fascinating, IMHO). The problem with the original VFX is that these do not look much better than on DVD (due to the old VFX creation process). I would very much like CBS to consider sending somebody to the TOS camera negative archives and look for the original VFX blue screen elements and restore the original VFX like they did for TNG-R (and I believe there'll be additional, unused and never before seen VFX shots). This would encourage me to buy TOS-R, again. (tell CBS!!!)
Bob
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"The first duty of every Starfleet officer is to the truth, whether it's scientific truth or historical truth or personal truth! It is the guiding principle on which Starfleet is based! Jean-Luc Picard |
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#4 |
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Vice Admiral
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Re: TOS in High-Def?
__________________
"You know. 1966? Seventy-nine episodes, about thirty good ones." - Phillip Fry describing Star Trek, Futurama |
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#5 |
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Fleet Captain
Location: Llandudno
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Re: TOS in High-Def?
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#6 | |
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Commander
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Re: TOS in High-Def?
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#7 | ||
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Vice Admiral
Location: Fort Dodge, IA
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Re: TOS in High-Def?
Which begs the question, why bother redoing them to begin with? Was it less cost effective than simply transferring the original effect shots into HD? I realize they won't look the best, but I'm willing to bet most fans will be fine with that.
![]() I am fascinated with the history of television shows I like. So I'm equally fascinated with little details, even if they take you out of the show, that reveal how the show was made, sets were constructed, ect. I imagine that a consequence of restoring older shows for HD means more of these details become evident. One thing I have noticed watching the original Trek in my 30's is I no longer am bothered by the "cheapness" of the sets as I was in my teens, when TNG was on the air. I'm actually impressed with most of the sets, and the one that aren't the best I can appreciate more because I realize it is a product of the time period. Especially considering how equally cheap sets in big budget motion pictures at the time look as well (like Logan's Run). |
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#8 |
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Commodore
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Re: TOS in High-Def?
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#9 |
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Commodore
Location: 21133
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Re: TOS in High-Def?
__________________
Yellow this, yellow that, yellow everywhere. Its not easy being green.
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#10 | |
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Vice Admiral
Location: NJ, USA
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Re: TOS in High-Def?
The FX were replaced because the old FX do not stand up to the new HD transfer, and unlike STNG-R, none of the original elements exist to recreate them....even if they were, I would suspect the camera work, lighting, and detail of the time would still not be up to today's standards, therefore the decision to update was pretty easy, if not inevitable. RAMA
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“Most people do not listen with the intent to understand; they listen with the intent to reply.”—Stephen R. Covey |
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#11 | ||
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Vice Admiral
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Re: TOS in High-Def?
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__________________
"You know. 1966? Seventy-nine episodes, about thirty good ones." - Phillip Fry describing Star Trek, Futurama |
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#12 | |||
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Vice Admiral
Location: NJ, USA
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Re: TOS in High-Def?
That Klingon ships still looks better than any single effect in TOS, hands down. RAMA
__________________
“Most people do not listen with the intent to understand; they listen with the intent to reply.”—Stephen R. Covey |
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#13 |
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Vice Admiral
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Re: TOS in High-Def?
__________________
"You know. 1966? Seventy-nine episodes, about thirty good ones." - Phillip Fry describing Star Trek, Futurama |
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#14 | |
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Admiral
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Re: TOS in High-Def?
Two, if the original film elements still existed, there would be no reason to recreate the phaser and torpedo effects using CGI. That's been done on Star Trek: The Next Generation because that series created those effects on video; everything on the original series was done on film. A shame the elements were not preserved, but hardly surprising, given the series' age. Also, although I'm not crazy about the CGI enhancements, few of them are as bad as the image you've posted. It's a bit harsh to condemn that work based on the worst example from it.
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"What do you hear, Starbuck?" "Nothing but the rain, sir." "Then grab your gun and bring in the cat." |
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#15 | |
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Vice Admiral
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Re: TOS in High-Def?
The D-7 just looked incredibly bad and I had a screencap, so I used it.
__________________
"You know. 1966? Seventy-nine episodes, about thirty good ones." - Phillip Fry describing Star Trek, Futurama |
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