Except the TOS E didn't have all that plating and aztec-ing.
Well, that's true. I just chalk that up to the new guys thinking modern audiences wouldn't "accept" it otherwise. I don't happen to agree, but...gotta let the kids have their fun, I guess.![]()
There was no reason Romulan stills from "Balance of Terror" could not have been used in "The Enterprise Incident." I think they used the Klingon ship because they wanted to get the new model in front of the camera. Actual Klingons were going to show up only once in a while, and this script was a golden opportunity to showcase the cool new miniature.
I figure it's more about giving it sufficient detail to look good in HD.
Actual Klingons were going to show up only once in a while, and this script was a golden opportunity to showcase the cool new miniature.
Also to get the most out of the money they spent on its construction, amortizing its cost across more episodes.
Why couldn't they have used Matt Jefferies other space station design?
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M.
Why couldn't they have used Matt Jefferies other space station design?
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M.
If the studio could do a visibly better job showing us the CGI Defiant in "In a Mirror, Darkly", why couldn't they do the same with TOS-R?
Why couldn't they have used Matt Jefferies other space station design?
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M.
Not bad, but each of the round segments would be solid, not hollow..
If the studio could do a visibly better job showing us the CGI Defiant in "In a Mirror, Darkly", why couldn't they do the same with TOS-R?
Because CBS wanted to play it cheap and went with their own in house Digital team who were not quite ready for Prime Time players.
Eden FX (who did In a Mirror Darkly) put in a bid for the gig but CBS turned them down.
I mean, it's only Star Trek. Who cares?
Spockboy
I seem to recall that they did make sure that all five Constitution-class ships in this episode were different. Different lighting in the hulls. More lights on the four crewed ships, and less on the M5 run Enterprise. Also that the lights in the next and secondary hull were in different patterns of each ship so that they didn't look entirely cookie cutter the same. That is in addition to the ships each having their own names and hull numbers. (unless the orginal which just split screened the same shot of Enterprise four times)
This is the same CBS who 50 years ago trolled GR to get ideas for Lost In Space. (mumbling)
I seem to recall that they did make sure that all five Constitution-class ships in this episode were different. Different lighting in the hulls. More lights on the four crewed ships, and less on the M5 run Enterprise. Also that the lights in the next and secondary hull were in different patterns of each ship so that they didn't look entirely cookie cutter the same. That is in addition to the ships each having their own names and hull numbers. (unless the orginal which just split screened the same shot of Enterprise four times)
Big whoop.
I seem to recall that they did make sure that all five Constitution-class ships in this episode were different. Different lighting in the hulls. More lights on the four crewed ships, and less on the M5 run Enterprise. Also that the lights in the next and secondary hull were in different patterns of each ship so that they didn't look entirely cookie cutter the same. That is in addition to the ships each having their own names and hull numbers. (unless the orginal which just split screened the same shot of Enterprise four times)
Then, of course, the new CBS (really Westinghouse) were taken over by Viacom, which was created by CBS in the early 70s to syndicate their old programs but spun off back when Skylab was still a going concern. After the Viacom takeover, they changed the name back to CBS, and spun off a new corporation called Viacom. These maneuvers may sound a little daft, but that's just how capitalism works.
Someone should go paint in a modern saltshaker in the Last Supper. It's how Leonardo would have done it with today's technology.
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