seems abit silly the more you think about it dosnt it. why would Kirk risk his life climbing a mountain with no safety ropes/harnesses. like...why? did he secretly want to commit suicide after the stressful events of Trek II/III? did he know spock would save his ass if anything went wrong?Yeah I've said it before but there are many free climbers in the world today in the peak of their physical health in their 20's and 30's and very few of them would even consider doing a free climb of El Cap.
So having a 55 year tubby Captain Kirk, who last I checked was a in a career that pretty much dominated his life and didn't leave him much time to become a top notch rock climber, do it was the absolute height of absurdity.
That was Shatner's ego at it absolute best. "No look I'm not getting older for godsakes, I'm only getting stronger and better and can do something that is impossible for even most pro rock climbers.
If he was going to do something like this he should have gone for something completely over the top like jogging along the waterfront with a harness on him attached to an aircraft carrier in the water by the running path and have him pulling it while maintaining a good 15 mph clip......Would have been just as likely as climbing El Cap and at least it would have been so ridiculous you could have just laughed instead of thinking "Oh my God......Shatner wants to take this scene seriously that he's climbing like this" and just being speechless.
In real life Shatner would have made it 10 feet off the base before either running out of strength or falling on his ass.
seems abit silly the more you think about it dosnt it. why would Kirk risk his life climbing a mountain with no safety ropes/harnesses. like...why? did he secretly want to commit suicide after the stressful events of Trek II/III? did he know spock would save his ass if anything went wrong?Yeah I've said it before but there are many free climbers in the world today in the peak of their physical health in their 20's and 30's and very few of them would even consider doing a free climb of El Cap.
So having a 55 year tubby Captain Kirk, who last I checked was a in a career that pretty much dominated his life and didn't leave him much time to become a top notch rock climber, do it was the absolute height of absurdity.
That was Shatner's ego at it absolute best. "No look I'm not getting older for godsakes, I'm only getting stronger and better and can do something that is impossible for even most pro rock climbers.
If he was going to do something like this he should have gone for something completely over the top like jogging along the waterfront with a harness on him attached to an aircraft carrier in the water by the running path and have him pulling it while maintaining a good 15 mph clip......Would have been just as likely as climbing El Cap and at least it would have been so ridiculous you could have just laughed instead of thinking "Oh my God......Shatner wants to take this scene seriously that he's climbing like this" and just being speechless.
In real life Shatner would have made it 10 feet off the base before either running out of strength or falling on his ass.
If you include the "rockman" as part of the SFX--then I think that it would be a good improvement.
I don't know if I'd say they were just "trying to match Star Wars." One of TMP's FX supervisors, John Dykstra, was the person in charge of Star Wars's effects; and the other, Douglas Trumbull, had done equally impressive work on films like 2001 and Close Encounters (and later Blade Runner). So it's not like they were mere imitators. The studio surely wanted another Star Wars, but Dykstra and Trumbull were simply living up to their own professional standards.
Yeah Dykstra and Trumbull were highly competent pros. But Paramount didn't have to hire them. In saying they were trying to match Star Wars I'm not saying they were in a competition, but the people in charge realized Star Wars had raised the bar and if they wanted TMP to be taken seriously they had to meet the new standard.
Wonder why/how Shatner came up with wanting the villain to be a rock monster? Some connection with the opening climb up the face of a gigantic rock? The rock is death. Go climb a rock. Kirk challenges the rock. challenges death.. and almost dies before Spock saves him. At the end of the film he is confronted with 'god' who he challenges ('what does god need with a starship') then 'god' turns into a rock (monster). The personification of the mountain? Of death? He runs away from the rock monster (death) and climbs up another rock/mountain to escape (connecting to the opening climb)... there he and the rock monster do battle before Spock saves him (again)I feel just the opposite. I mean, this was a story about the search for a "God" that turned out to be a superpowerful alien entity. Rock monsters would've been a ridiculous anticlimax to that story, a crude and banal instrument for something so advanced. I preferred the version we got, with Kirk being chased by something unseen, implying some unknowable cosmic force. It was the one instance where the low FX budget made the film less cheesy than it otherwise would've been.
Wonder why/how Shatner came up with wanting the villain to be a rock monster?
I like The Final Frontier. But improved effects wouldn't have improved the issues with the movie.
Having read a few interviews, no I don't have citations, this is pretty much what the original intent had been. Especially the climbing part.Wonder why/how Shatner came up with wanting the villain to be a rock monster? Some connection with the opening climb up the face of a gigantic rock? The rock is death. Go climb a rock. Kirk challenges the rock. challenges death.. and almost dies before Spock saves him. At the end of the film he is confronted with 'god' who he challenges ('what does god need with a starship') then 'god' turns into a rock (monster). The personification of the mountain? Of death? He runs away from the rock monster (death) and climbs up another rock/mountain to escape (connecting to the opening climb)... there he and the rock monster do battle before Spock saves him (again)I feel just the opposite. I mean, this was a story about the search for a "God" that turned out to be a superpowerful alien entity. Rock monsters would've been a ridiculous anticlimax to that story, a crude and banal instrument for something so advanced. I preferred the version we got, with Kirk being chased by something unseen, implying some unknowable cosmic force. It was the one instance where the low FX budget made the film less cheesy than it otherwise would've been.
It all seems...Connected...somehow. By rocks![]()
...yet noone who saw them singing Row Row your boat or Scotty banging his head on a beam had the balls to say "Uh...no" Was Shatner really THAT powerful that every cornball idea he had, minus the rockmen I guess, was just rubber stamped without anyone daring to say this doesn't work, it needs to be changed.
Wonder why/how Shatner came up with wanting the villain to be a rock monster? Some connection with the opening climb up the face of a gigantic rock? The rock is death. Go climb a rock. Kirk challenges the rock. challenges death.. and almost dies before Spock saves him. At the end of the film he is confronted with 'god' who he challenges ('what does god need with a starship') then 'god' turns into a rock (monster). The personification of the mountain? Of death? He runs away from the rock monster (death) and climbs up another rock/mountain to escape (connecting to the opening climb)... there he and the rock monster do battle before Spock saves him (again)
It all seems...Connected...somehow. By rocks![]()
I like The Final Frontier. But improved effects wouldn't have improved the issues with the movie.
Sorry, Shatner may have paid lip service to the idea of wanting to make a thought provoking film, but everything I've read about the development of the script indicates he never had a grasp on how to do anything of the sort.
Sorry, Shatner may have paid lip service to the idea of wanting to make a thought provoking film, but everything I've read about the development of the script indicates he never had a grasp on how to do anything of the sort.
You don't need a lot of money to come up with a good story. The premise of the story was flawed and they never got past that. All the fancy set pieces and flashy visuals don't make up for the fact that there's no damned story there and in everything I've seen regarding the treatments there never was.
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And he had the money. TFF cost 43% more than TVH. He just spent it badly.
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