Even if some in the audience weren't specifically familiar with TNG holodecks at the time, the concept of virtual reality was very much "out there" in the public awareness by the mid-90s. I think that such viewers would generally have gotten that.
Even if some in the audience weren't specifically familiar with TNG holodecks at the time, the concept of virtual reality was very much "out there" in the public awareness by the mid-90s. I think that such viewers would generally have gotten that.
It may seem silly to some of us that the visual dissonance between the Enterprise-B and the HMS Enterprise would be so stark to an audience member unfamiliar with TNG, but from their point-of-view it's as random as cut as if a Brontosaurus suddenly, randomly, had appeared in a corridor shot. It was absolutely the wrong way to introduce the 24th century Star Trek crew to an audience which the movie otherwise presumes to be unfamiliar with 24th century Trek.
If they'd just shifted from Enterprise-B to an establishing shot of the Enterprise-D, the scenes would have blended together; the ``78 Years Later'' (or whatever it was) wouldn't even register. The introduction to the 24th Century needs to be visually distinct from the scenes before.
It may seem silly to some of us that the visual dissonance between the Enterprise-B and the HMS Enterprise would be so stark to an audience member unfamiliar with TNG, but from their point-of-view it's as random as cut as if a Brontosaurus suddenly, randomly, had appeared in a corridor shot. It was absolutely the wrong way to introduce the 24th century Star Trek crew to an audience which the movie otherwise presumes to be unfamiliar with 24th century Trek.
No, I can't get behind that. The soft introduction to the 24th century in a holodeck sailing ship is a good enough idea. If they'd just shifted from Enterprise-B to an establishing shot of the Enterprise-D, the scenes would have blended together; the ``78 Years Later'' (or whatever it was) wouldn't even register. The introduction to the 24th Century needs to be visually distinct from the scenes before.
Waiting so long for an establishing shot of the new ship, though, yeah, that's a problem, but transitioning to the holodeck isn't.
The Ent-B should have been designed to look absolutely nothing like the Ent-D (for the same reason why the four background ship classes in First Contact looked nothing like the Ent-E, to avoid confusion over which ship was the Enterprise).
^ I'll grant you that an establishing shot of the Enterprise-D might have helped to sell the time-shift. But I do think they missed a trick in failing to explain the holodeck at all to audiences presumably unfamiliar with TNG. Sure, the audience can infer that it's a virtual reality suite of some description. But the fact that we don't see (for example) the program shut off at the end of the scene, and a crossfade to the holodeck grid, just makes it all seem... rather bizarre.
I kind of liked the way they introduced the D onscreen with no fuss, no grandstanding etc. just like there it is ...from behind (in a beautiful FX shot)...and moving on
Except the ship models on the wall of the observation lounge throughout the run of TNG established the B as an Excelsior-class ship or something with the same general shape. So they couldn't have made it too different from that, not without drawing the ire of the fandom continuity police.
Case in point: I went to to see Generations on opening night with my girlfriend at the time, who was not a Star Trek fan and didn't watch TNG. ...
When Smallville was around, there were genuinely fans of the show who had no idea that it was a Superman prequel, who didn't recognize the name Clark Kent as being associated with Superman. They just watched it because it was Dawson's Creek with superpowers.
Case in point: I went to to see Generations on opening night with my girlfriend at the time, who was not a Star Trek fan and didn't watch TNG. ...
Despite the discussions and justifications in this thread, I think the reality is that Generations was written for and sold purely to TNG fans. People like your girlfriend would only see the movie because you (the Trek fan) took her to it. Left to their own devices, they'd never have gone otherwise.
Generations was clearly designed as if it was the first episode of the "8th season" of TNG. There was never an attempt to translate it for the mass audience. It was completely assumed that you, the viewer, knew everything about these characters, the ship, and the plot even before you saw the film. The story opens 'in medias res' because it was written that way without a second thought. The bulk of the revenue was guaranteed to be coming from Trek fans who were suffering TNG withdrawal. Shortsighted, sure, but it did its job.
When Smallville was around, there were genuinely fans of the show who had no idea that it was a Superman prequel, who didn't recognize the name Clark Kent as being associated with Superman. They just watched it because it was Dawson's Creek with superpowers.
Sorry, I just can't believe that. Superman has been in the public consciousness since the 1930s, and Smallville itself was touted as the beginnings of the legend even before the show started. What you're suggesting certainly can't be true (at least not for "fans" of the show).
the Enterprise was shown in her entirety so that fans who'd never seen Star Trek before could get an idea of what the series was about.
The bulk of the revenue was guaranteed to be coming from Trek fans who were suffering TNG withdrawal. Shortsighted, sure, but it did its job.
I would argue the opposite, actually. By catering solely to the TNG fanbase and not the casual viewing audience, they set themselves up for the inevitable crash and burn that eventually happened. Sure they made some money off the fact that this was the last time we were going to see Kirk, and then bringing in the Borg, but that simply wasn't sustainable in the long run.
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