I remember reading books about space published in the mid eighties confidently predicting a permanent moonbase by the year 2000.
Shouldn't that be 1999?

I remember reading books about space published in the mid eighties confidently predicting a permanent moonbase by the year 2000.
The first reference that I remember seeing was on the cover of the first issue of Marvel's run, which was part one of their adaption of TMP. It said "A 23rd century Odyssey today!". Wiether or not there was an earlier reference to the 23rd century, I can't say.
One thing I didn't, even at the time, like about The Motion Picture was that tag-line 'The Human Adventure Is Just Beginning'. I don't know why, but it struck me as un-trek-ish and cold.
I love that another STV tagline was "The Enterprise is back. This time, have they gone too far?" Did the people promoting the movie want people to snicker? Another one I like is for STIII: "Kirk must battle the Klingons to protect the Genesis Planet and save a friend’s life." Was that supposed to be the TV Guide synopsis or something?One thing I didn't, even at the time, like about The Motion Picture was that tag-line 'The Human Adventure Is Just Beginning'. I don't know why, but it struck me as un-trek-ish and cold.
That is odd. It sounds entirely Trekkish to me -- what is ST about if not the human adventure? And neither humanity nor adventure seems like a cold concept to me.
I suppose it is a little abstract and impersonal, not about any specific character or their motivation. But it's an optimistic message with a lot of implicit promise, so I quite like it.
And there are worse taglines. Like TWOK's "At the end of the universe lies the beginning of vengeance." First off, what does "the end of the universe" have to do with the movie? That's just meaningless. And vengeance may be more personal, but it's a less agreeable thing to be beginning than adventure.
And then there's the infamous STV tagline, "Why are they putting seatbelts in theatres this summer?" Leading to the popular gag response, "To keep the audience from walking out." Really, not many of the Trek movie taglines were all that good.
I remember reading books about space published in the mid eighties confidently predicting a permanent moonbase by the year 2000. Needless to say, reading these in the nineties, it was evident that wouldn't be the case.
One thing I didn't, even at the time, like about The Motion Picture was that tag-line 'The Human Adventure Is Just Beginning'. I don't know why, but it struck me as un-trek-ish and cold.
That is odd. It sounds entirely Trekkish to me -- what is ST about if not the human adventure? And neither humanity nor adventure seems like a cold concept to me.
I suppose it is a little abstract and impersonal, not about any specific character or their motivation. But it's an optimistic message with a lot of implicit promise, so I quite like it.
And the very same document that first spelled out that conceit as one of the series' primary selling points is also the document that, literally just one page earlier, defines the series' timeframe as potentially being as early as 1995, and no later than 2995 (which would only have been 1031 years in the future).
I guess we can be glad that they decided not to go with the ultra-futuristic 1995!![]()
Although, it was often assumed then that technology would advance at the same rate it had been since 1945, or perhaps even faster. In thirty years we'd gone from flying around in Zeppelins and biplanes to walking on the moon. Think what another thirty years would bring! I remember reading books about space published in the mid eighties confidently predicting a permanent moonbase by the year 2000. Needless to say, reading these in the nineties, it was evident that wouldn't be the case.
Well we saw how a Moonbase Alpha turned out in Sapce: 1999 not that great.2030 at this time might be more reasonable for a moonabse as for the GA shows
Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons set in 2068
Thunderbirds set in 2065 (I suspect the new version Thunderbirds are Go! will be set around the same time)
Fireball XL5 set in 2062
Stingray set in 2065
Terrahawks was set in 2020
Space Precinct was set in 2040
So it would seem as if GA was a fan of the mid 21st century.
One thing I didn't, even at the time, like about The Motion Picture was that tag-line 'The Human Adventure Is Just Beginning'. I don't know why, but it struck me as un-trek-ish and cold.
That is odd. It sounds entirely Trekkish to me -- what is ST about if not the human adventure? And neither humanity nor adventure seems like a cold concept to me.
And there are worse taglines. Like TWOK's "At the end of the universe lies the beginning of vengeance." First off, what does "the end of the universe" have to do with the movie? That's just meaningless. And vengeance may be more personal, but it's a less agreeable thing to be beginning than adventure.
And then there's the infamous STV tagline, "Why are they putting seatbelts in theatres this summer?" Leading to the popular gag response, "To keep the audience from walking out."
"The human adventure is just beginning" always sounded fine to me. By implication, TOS was part of the "human adventure" as well, and the movie tagline is saying, "You ain't seen nothing yet!" It was the first live action Trek in a decade and done on a huge film budget...so there's nothing "off" there IMO.
And as TREK_GOD_1 mentioned, it seemed to minimize the adventures we had come to know so well on television.
I don't think that was the intent. It strikes me as more like saying that, even with all the space exploration humanity has done in the Trek era, humanity has still only begun its journey of discovery, since beyond that is the transcendence that Decker experienced with V'Ger. So it's sort of in the same vein of what Q told Picard in "All Good Things," that the real final frontier was the exploration of the nature of existence, or whatever.
"The human adventure is just beginning" always sounded fine to me. By implication, TOS was part of the "human adventure" as well, and the movie tagline is saying, "You ain't seen nothing yet!" It was the first live action Trek in a decade and done on a huge film budget...so there's nothing "off" there IMO.
"The human adventure is about to end" would make a fantastic bookend-ish Trek movie tagline.
The first reference that I remember seeing was on the cover of the first issue of Marvel's run, which was part one of their adaption of TMP. It said "A 23rd century Odyssey today!". Wiether or not there was an earlier reference to the 23rd century, I can't say.
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