I remembered being disappointed at age 4 expecting to be as good as Khan but i thought it was a disappointing film, however years later the DC is far better no doubt.
The prologue is the most interesting part; there's not as much additional material in the text itself as there were in some of the later novelizations.Can anyone favorably comment on the novelization?
Overgeeked said:Can anyone favorably comment on the novelization?
Probably because there was no Harve Bennett yet to back Gene into a corner...However, it also shows that Roddenberry didn't hold to his own ideal that StarFleet isn't military. Kirk's thoughts about the Enterprise: That the term "heavy cruiser" was a misnomer, and that Enterprise was more deserving of a designation like "battleship". Last time I checked, there were no battleships in a non-military force.
Probably because there was no Harve Bennett yet to back Gene into a corner...However, it also shows that Roddenberry didn't hold to his own ideal that StarFleet isn't military. Kirk's thoughts about the Enterprise: That the term "heavy cruiser" was a misnomer, and that Enterprise was more deserving of a designation like "battleship". Last time I checked, there were no battleships in a non-military force.
I don't have the elaboration but it's my understanding through my reading here and elsewhere that certain comments such as how Starfleet is not a military institution were reactions to the more militaristic aspects that Harve and Nick Meyer had brought to Trek, with the uniforms, with the subtle references to Hornblower, etc. Not issues with the decisions, necessarily, but issues with the fact that he was gently being pushed out of a position of power with Trek.
Seems to be something stuck in Roddenberry's craw that persisted into the development of TNG, where Picard actually refuses to define Starfleet as a military, and a project Gene was spearheading this time.
I'm more than sure others have more insightful or correct information, of course.
I wish I could agree. I wanted to like TMP. Saw it a second time during its original run to be sure of my distaste for the movie, and the reasons for it: a script full of undistinguished dialogue (possibly because it wasn't well sorted even after shooting began) performed by actors who didn't seem particularly attuned to their roles, and were unable to evoke whatever small amount of charm or humor the ultimate script contained - which would have helped a lot. Nor did the director's edition solve the problems, at least for me.
drt said:Yes, because TNG is essentially a lot of the ideas for Phase II, but with the names changed - shoot, Riker and Troi have an almost word-for-word conversation upon being reunited in "Encounter at Farpoint" as Decker and Ilia do in TMP.
Does anyone know what the story was with some of those Real Life-looking people in the Recreation Deck sequence? For example, there's one fat guy with a very bad complexion who's given, oh ... maybe 5 seconds worth of screentime for reasons that are not at all clear. Elsewhere, there are others who take a decent picture, mixed in with actor-looking people and again, there's no obvious reason for this. Was it all part of a TREKKIE contest, or something "Win a Chance to Appear on STAR TREK: The Motion Picture"?
There's a whole anxious, uncomfortable air to the proceedings - and while I understand it's maybe not what Trekkies wanted to see back in '79, in hindsight I think it helps the film a lot.
There's a whole anxious, uncomfortable air to the proceedings - and while I understand it's maybe not what Trekkies wanted to see back in '79, in hindsight I think it helps the film a lot.
I can understand this attitude among fans who didn't see TMP in theaters. But those like myself who did (after waiting for a decade with no new original-cast Star Trek other than the compromised cartoon series and the Kirk/Spock anti-drug abuse radio commercial circa 1975) certainly felt this as a detriment.
Unlike the Dudley Do-Right costumes from TWOK onward, I think the TMP jumpsuits actually make a lot of sense in a futuristic world of controlled-climate spaceship environments where everything is highly computerized and your clothes are beamed directly onto you (i.e. the scene where the Ilia probe is introduced).
I maintain that TMP is the only "great" Trek film. It is a true cerebral science fiction story, and it is a fantastic, epic film in many ways. It is the kind of Trek that Gene Roddenberry wanted to do from the very beginning... Some time, try watching "The Cage," then skipping the rest of TOS, then watching TMP. You'll see what I mean.
Kor
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