I recently finished reading Preston Neal Jones's impressive and massive book Return to Tomorrow, The Filming of Star Trek: The Motion Picture, and the book dispelled quite a bit of conventional wisdom and myth about the film's production and its history. I thought it would be fun to talk about some of what this and other first-hand accounts tell us about what happened.
As a for instance: the sound mix. It's often claimed that there wasn't time to do a proper sound mix or use all the sound effects in the film. But from reading the book, this doesn't seem to have been the case.
Anyone else reading the book find some fun facts they want to share/discuss?
As a for instance: the sound mix. It's often claimed that there wasn't time to do a proper sound mix or use all the sound effects in the film. But from reading the book, this doesn't seem to have been the case.
So, if anything, the mix was never ideal due to the Dolby limitations, and perhaps some sound effects were dialed down or out in favor of the music but overall the relative lack of pervasive sound effects, especially on the bridge, was a deliberate creative choice....we weren't able to carry the sound effects anywhere near as brightly or heavily as we would have liked to, as will be evidenced on the 70mm, if and when that comes it [it never did], simply because the Dolby Optical system will only hold so much dynamic information and we favored the music over the sound effects. That was Bob's choice and I think that was probably the correct one.
But we went for a very spartan approach to the sound. I didn't think it would be appropriate to have all kinds of little beeps and tweets and little business up on the bridge, as has been done before, because that just didn't seem terribly modern to me. It was very cluttered and it may have served well on TV, but on the big screen it just seemed unnecessarily busy, especially since we had all these visuals. Why would these people have all these extraneous beeps, clicks, pops, whistles and doo-dahs going on if they were so advanced?
—Tod Ramsay, Editor (p.564)
Anyone else reading the book find some fun facts they want to share/discuss?
Last edited: