Star Trek TNG Remastered?

Discussion in 'Star Trek: The Next Generation' started by Jiraiya, May 9, 2009.

  1. neo_wales2000

    neo_wales2000 Cadet Newbie

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    Don't see the point, the series is a classic and should be left that way. I have HD/blueray at home and its OK but does not blow me away to be honest; lots of hype involved with it.
     
  2. Cyrus

    Cyrus Vice Admiral Admiral

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    Six times better resolution is not hype. The image quality difference between HD and SD channels is huge.
     
  3. JTK2099

    JTK2099 Lieutenant Red Shirt

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    After I saw the new CG model of the Enterprise D in "These are the Voyages . . ." I started thinking about how awesome TNG would be remastered with updated effects. I do imagine it will be done eventually. CBS will want to continue making money off of Trek for many years to come. It may cost a lot but it takes money to make money.
     
  4. cybersoldier

    cybersoldier Commander Red Shirt

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    Unless Paramount goes cheap and use DNR like the the blu-ray version of Star Trek I-VI. Paramount has the original negatives, but it depends on the cost who know perhaps season 1 and 2 will get remastered to see the demand if good enough the rest of the seasons may get the remastered treatment as well
     
  5. jefferiestubes8

    jefferiestubes8 Commodore Commodore

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    If CBS DVD/Paramount Home Entertainment is spending a bunch of money to do it why wouldn't they just do a fan collective on Blu-ray of TNG of 12-14 episodes instead of 24 episodes as an entire season? It is a lower cost business decision for them and the product would cost less for consumers. Casual fans would probably buy it instead of investing in an entire season.
    Right now a 40-year old TV series TOS season 1 is on Blu-ray for $69.99-85. (Internet prices)
    Could they charge $40. for a TNG Blu-ray fan collective? $45?

    If the demand is there they may do full seasons.
     
  6. Hober Mallow

    Hober Mallow Commodore Commodore

    If Paramount can find a way to do entire seasons, they'll sell entire seasons. It's just finding a way to make it practical and cost effective. They're not going to want to do all the post-production for the entire series all over again from the start the conventional way.
     
  7. LitmusDragon

    LitmusDragon Commodore Commodore

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    I think for any kind of hi-def treatment they are going to need to source from the original film negatives. It doesn't seem like editing the original film elements back together should be all that difficult. It's the fact that they'd have to replace every single transporter and phaser effect that would make this really time consuming. TOS at least could use the existing transporter and phaser effects and save their budget for the background and space exteriors. All this stuff on TNG was done on video tape.
     
  8. Mr. Laser Beam

    Mr. Laser Beam Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    Really? I didn't know they'd have to go that far.

    That being said: This is their chance to make phaser effects that make sense. As we all know, when we saw a phaser fired on that show, the beam actually took a visible amount of time to reach its target. This should not happen. These are beams of light, after all. They should be instant. The only time I ever remember this actually being done right, was in Voyager's "Future's End" when somebody fires a 29th century phaser. It *immediately* took out its target. The beam appeared between the phaser and the target without any sense of taking any time to reach it. It was near instantaneous. As all phaser beams should be.
     
  9. trevanian

    trevanian Rear Admiral

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    Quote:
    Also, look at how the show was having to go into reruns every 7 or 8 weeks, because they were so far behind. That is with not having the TOS optical backload situation, so the show could have easily been in an ever-increasing hole (like taking 2 years to get 25 episodes out) if they had been doing it all in a traditional finish process.
    But that also reflects changes in how TV schedules worked. In the 1960s and 70s, you had TV shows run, basically, a new episode every week for 26 (or even more) weeks in a row, then go into the rerun (or preemption) cycle. By the 1980s, the rising importance of sweeps months meant there was motivation to put in reruns on weeks nobody was watching (like, between Christmas and New Year's) and save brand-new episodes for February and, particularly, May. It wasn't just Next Generation going into reruns for a month at a time; it was everything.

    ME:
    I don't recall ANY other show (except MOONLIGHTING, which missed most of its airdates) going on that cycle till the 90s.

    If you start in late September, throw up reruns in the holiday weeks and figure maybe one or two pre-emptions, then you still have new programming into the first part of May if you're doing 22 (later if you do 26, which was getting less common in network, but was common for syndication at that point I think.)
     
    Last edited: May 21, 2009
  10. trevanian

    trevanian Rear Admiral

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    That's making a science-minded assumption about the beam, which is a pretty big leap considering how unscientific trek is becoming (especially recently.)

    By way of comparison, I remember getting in an argument with somebody about the guys in SW being able to block laser beams with a light saber, saying it doesn't matter how force-ful his parrying is, he doesn't move at lightspeed. The counterargument (the main one, there were many, including the notion that Luke can use the force to see into the future to know where to stick his sword) was that the beams weren't traveling at lightspeed. HUH? They're BEAMS! They canna travel any slower.

    If that's the level of science that informs most SW, and by extension, most current TREK, then the beams will probably be able to bend around corners by the next sequel.

    The slow beams DO bother me as well (esp in CONSPIRACY), but there are so many other things that seem like bigger deals (the many early TNG planets that look like out of focus blobs, the no-blur of ship movement in many early shows, esp with the 2 fter model), that the phaser speed seems miniscule by comparison. If I had a huge caveat, it would be the fireballs in space that showed up from FARPOINT onward. Fireballs in space just don't track, that is serious SW territory (and another example of how moderntrek is getting the science worse ... for the director's edition of TMP they added a fireball to the rock blowing up at the end of the wormhole.)
     
  11. Mr. Laser Beam

    Mr. Laser Beam Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    Ah, but he doesn't need to. All a Jedi has to do is *put his lightsaber in front of where the beam would be*. That doesn't require moving at lightspeed. The beam is going to get from whoever's firing, to the Jedi, regardless. All that matters is having something *blocking* said Jedi from being hit.
     
  12. nickfrye

    nickfrye Ensign Newbie

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    did you know that start trek is on bluray?[​IMG]

    gives us a chance especially young ones to watch over the original film..

    you can have star trek from its hit series to the original movies..
     
  13. FalTorPan

    FalTorPan Vice Admiral Admiral

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    You're right. The Jedi doesn't have to move at lightspeed to parry a laser bolt. Let's estimate how fast he would need to be.

    Assume the shooter and the Jedi were standing ten feet apart. Light travels at exactly 299,792,458 meters per second. Ten feet is exactly 3.048 meters, which means that the laser bolt would travel from the blaster barrel to the Jedi's location in approximately 0.0000000102 seconds.

    Assume the Jedi has to move his lightsaber a mere three feet in order to parry the laser bolt. Three feet is exactly 0.9144 meters, and the Jedi has an entire 0.0000000102 seconds to move the lightsaber. 0.9144 meters per 0.0000000102 seconds is about 89,600,000 meters per second, or only about 0.3 times the speed of light.

    In summary, the Jedi would have time to take a nap and play a game of sabacc before moving the lightsaber.
     
  14. trevanian

    trevanian Rear Admiral

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    Maybe I'm just being extraordinarily dense or not getting the joke (if you're making one), but in those movies, especially the parts of the prequels I've seen, they are blocking multiple shots in rapid succession. ANY variation in how the shooter fires -- a flinch, a jostling, a nervous wiggle of the gunhand -- will result in a slightly different shot, and a resulting different position hit on the soon to be victim, necessitating a move on the part of the soon to be victim to head off that next beam hit.

    I also don't understand how in the prequels they can jump out of air cars and free fall onto other cars successfully, but I'm hoping the explanation for that isn't as headache inducing as this one seems to be. On second thought, I bet it is, so I just don't want to know (or see those level of rationalizations in what is in theory a trek thread.)

    Sorry for the detour.
     
  15. Tomalak

    Tomalak Vice Admiral Admiral

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    But it wasn't a "fireball", it was Q. He can do whatever he likes.
     
  16. trevanian

    trevanian Rear Admiral

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    I'm talking about the Enterprise torpedoes detonating, not anything Q is doing.
     
  17. jefferiestubes8

    jefferiestubes8 Commodore Commodore

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    Hober Mallow
    CBS DVD/Paramount Home Entertainment may not want to spend the money to re-conform the show to HD and that IS what it is called 'reconforming to HD'. They would be reconforming the original film to the standard definition edit, and re-rendering the visual effects in HD.
    Please see these two posts for details on the actual work needed.
    http://www.trekbbs.com/showpost.php?p=2696435&postcount=27
    http://www.trekbbs.com/showpost.php?p=2696616&postcount=28
    The edit decisions have already been made starting in 1987. Whether they can access the edit decisions that correspond to the actual film negative is another matter (film keycode#s to pull negative to re-telecine original camera negative 'select takes' in to use for HD editing). Without an EDL [Edit Decision List] and film keycode every cut would have to be matched by eye which is a lot of work and NOT conventional.

    When it comes to the visual effects and the live-action model work of Enterprise D most likely they would go with all CGI. see this post for why.
     
  18. Squiggy

    Squiggy FrozenToad Admiral

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    Wasn't TNG recently re-released to broadcast syndication?
     
  19. jefferiestubes8

    jefferiestubes8 Commodore Commodore

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    Re: Star Trek TNG Broadcast Syndication 2009

    TNG Headed Back To Broadcast Syndication
    January 27, 2009
    http://trekmovie.com/2009/01/27/tng-headed-back-to-broadcast-syndication/

    http://www.hometheaterforum.com/htf...generation-returns-broadcast-syndication.html
     
  20. Falcor5

    Falcor5 Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    I wonder if it would be easier for Paramount to justify the costs to convert TNG to HD if they got a channel like the Sci-Fi network or Spike to agree to air the episodes in HD as they were made. I mean I think that would be a pretty good draw if a channel had Exclusive rights to the first showing of a TNG episode in HD. And then after each season is aired they could release that season on Blu-ray. I know I would watch!!