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What would you change about the TOS Enterprise?

The horrendous interior design?

I'd get rid of all the bright, orangey red that seemed to be used everywhere, as well as the other overly bright primaries.
That came from a lot higher up than Matt Jeffries--the network/sponsors. They were trying to sell color TVs. Sign o' the times.

And still it would be the thing I'd change given the chance. That and the uniforms.

I'm aware that the color palette was chosen to promote colour TVs, but that doesn't stop it from making my eyes bleed.

I think they called that Star Trek: The Motion Picture.
 
I'd like to think that the bridge was configurable at the Captain's prerogative. And that Captain Kirk changed the layout so people wouldn't enter the bridge behind his back.
I've screened so many Mafia and gangster movies over the years that when I eat at an Italian restaurant, I always face the door.

They've got him sitting with his back to the door
Now he won't be my fast gun anymore
 
I'd like to think that the bridge was configurable at the Captain's prerogative. And that Captain Kirk changed the layout so people wouldn't enter the bridge behind his back.
I've screened so many Mafia and gangster movies over the years that when I eat at an Italian restaurant, I always face the door.

They've got him sitting with his back to the door
Now he won't be my fast gun anymore

Say goodbye to Hollywood...
 
The captain's chair swivels. And it's not about security - it's about the best camera angle that includes the star in the shot.
Oh, no argument here about that! Jefferies originally put the door at the back of the Bridge, just like any other cockpit in the world (he was from an aviation background, after all). All other explanations about why the doors were moved in-universe are just rationalizations after the fact, and thus don't always make the most amount of sense.
 
The captain's chair swivels. And it's not about security - it's about the best camera angle that includes the star in the shot.
Oh, no argument here about that! Jefferies originally put the door at the back of the Bridge, just like any other cockpit in the world (he was from an aviation background, after all). All other explanations about why the doors were moved in-universe are just rationalizations after the fact, and thus don't always make the most amount of sense.

Heck, according to TMP Klingons sit with the entire crew at their back.
 
I'd move the turbolift on the outside so that it matched the set. That's it. Ok, I might make the position lights of a more realistic size.


I'd like to think that the bridge was configurable at the Captain's prerogative. And that Captain Kirk changed the layout so people wouldn't enter the bridge behind his back.
I've screened so many Mafia and gangster movies over the years that when I eat at an Italian restaurant, I always face the door. And I've been out of the movie business for nine years now.

Well, Chris Pike already had it that way. Maybe he was the paranoid and Kirk just didn't care.

Makes his death in Into Darkness kind of ironic.
 
July 28 2015, 01:24 PM
I'd change the oil. It's been over 3000 parsecs.

July 6 2015, 04:20 PM
I'd change the dilithium crystals every 3000 light years.

Beat you to it by a country parsec. ;)

Ah, crap...I had a feeling somebody had already said something to that effect, but when you're checking in on a post now and then, you don't always remember what you read in it days ago.

Or in the future! :lol:
 
Laughing, Maurice--a country parsec, indeed! May I please borrow that?

Heck, according to TMP Klingons sit with the entire crew at their back.
Given the Klingon culture, that takes balls.

T'Girl, my thoughts exactly! It wouldn't do to have an "Et tu, Brute?" moment in the middle of an important battle--as if Sulu with sword in hand weren't threatening enough to his shipmates! Of course, that moment did give us a few gems:

SULU: I'll protect you, fair maiden!
UHURA: Sorry, neither!

SPOCK: Take D'Artagnan here to Sickbay.
(That's my favorite Uhura moment ever--and Spock's rejoinder is not far behind.)
 
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Heck, according to TMP Klingons sit with the entire crew at their back.
Given the Klingon culture, that takes balls.

T'Girl, my thoughts exactly! It wouldn't do to have an "Et tu, Brute?" moment in the middle of an important battle
I'd think that would be the entire point of the captain being seated that way. What better way to say "Just try it, fuckers!" than to sit with your back to them.

Risky but sends a message. :klingon:
 
You know, I honestly don't know what's worse.

The "Enterprise must be changed" crowd

or the

"Oscar tango whiskey foxtrot! YOU CHANGED THE ENTERPRISE! You're a dirty rotten bleeping bleepity bleep! It's ARMAGEDDON! It's THE END OF THE WORLD YOU YOU YOUUUUUUUUUUU!"

Well, you get the idea.

HEy, anybody want to help me overthrow the Vatican?
 
Change to make a positive improvement over what came before, is good.
Change just to demonstrate that you can ...isn't.
 
Every so often I wonder how the classic sets would look if one took the original blueprints and built the sets to a modern design ethic, slipping in subtle changes that don't make it look that different, but make it plain that it now follows the new understanding of modern computing, and digital interfaces. No changes to the layout, just modern materials and modern design elements. If done right, it could possibly look really cool.
 
Every so often I wonder how the classic sets would look if one took the original blueprints and built the sets to a modern design ethic, slipping in subtle changes that don't make it look that different, but make it plain that it now follows the new understanding of modern computing, and digital interfaces. No changes to the layout, just modern materials and modern design elements. If done right, it could possibly look really cool.

Enterprise sort-of did that to the computer displays in their "mirror" episodes, which took place on the TOS-era Defiant.
 
Why do things need to be changed at all?

I don't mind change, but i don't like change for the sake of change. Change should have a good well reasoned reason.

In all honesty though, I'm not sure the TOS original aesthetics would work in the modern age if it were a brand new show.

It might, but with all the grim and gritty feel because of the Batman effect, I'm not sure.

I wonder if someone could do a photoshop of the interior design as though it were a Batman grim and grittier aesthetic.
 
I think that the grim and gritty look in space began with Star Wars.
Starfleet is basically the US Navy in space. And they clean everything.
Also, a spacecraft that spends all of it's time in space isn't going to get dirty or weather. Unless there's some sort of extreme event like the giant space amoeba.
I think that weathering the TOS filming model at all was a bad idea. Just look at the Space Shuttle Atlantis on display in Florida. All of it's career it looked dirty and scorched on the outside. But when it came time to retire it and go on display they finally gave it a wash. And now it looks brand new. With the exception of reentry scoring on the heatshield tiles.
 
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