Obviously, they had someone on the inside. Simply no other way to pull off what they did.
Maybe they asked Khan, he knew all of the information.
Obviously, they had someone on the inside. Simply no other way to pull off what they did.
The detail on the rank stripes in "The Cage" and "Where No Man...".
According to an anecdote told at a convention by Richard Arnold, the rank stripes in "The Cage" were created very quickly. They are gold-painted, wide elastic bands, originally used to bundle envelopes, co-opted from the Desilu mail room!
Not sure I believe that based on the detail in the screencap Bill posted - I can't imagine they'd put in more effort for a briefly glimpsed junior crewman, and considering the source...
According to an anecdote told at a convention by Richard Arnold, the rank stripes in "The Cage" were created very quickly. They are gold-painted, wide elastic bands, originally used to bundle envelopes, co-opted from the Desilu mail room!
Not sure I believe that based on the detail in the screencap Bill posted - I can't imagine they'd put in more effort for a briefly glimpsed junior crewman, and considering the source...
Therin is likely talking about the full rank stripes. They do look like banding straps now that he mentions it.
Plus, it doesn't make a lot of sense that they'd make the extra effort for a supporting player, but go cheap on the costumes for their lead.
There is also a nice coffee stain down the side of the M-5 control box on the side of Kirk's chair. Maybe that's why M-5 went crazy; coffee in the circuits...![]()
Based on this remark (in another thread):
Watching "The Cage" and I never realized there is a small trickle of water coming off of the rocks just below the Talosian elevator on the planet surface.
And this remark:
One day I might get the BluRays just so I can see if there's something in the live-action footage I might have missed all these years.
Hey, wait a minute... That could make an interesting thread.![]()
Here we are.
For those of you who have TOS on BluRay can you share something you saw onscreen that somehow you never noticed before in all your previous viewings over the years?
I've heard (never seen it for myself) that to watch TOS in HD television treatment, the seam between Leonard Nimoy's prosthetics and his real ears is obvious.
Unfortunately I see a lot of 'sanding marks' and areas where you can tell the black paint has been touched up on the Bridge consoles from time to time. I DON'T fault to production crew as there's no way in hell they thought that would ever be discernible because I'm sure they never thought anyone would view these episodes at such high resolution on giant clear monitors 45+ years later.![]()
Plus, it doesn't make a lot of sense that they'd make the extra effort for a supporting player, but go cheap on the costumes for their lead.
Plus, it doesn't make a lot of sense that they'd make the extra effort for a supporting player, but go cheap on the costumes for their lead.
I wonder if at some point they had plans for "Garison" to be a more prominent character. In one of the script revisions he changed from "crewman" to "Bridge Chief Petty Officer," and was apparently given a special insignia to go along with it. To give a more naval feel, or to be like the bosun in Forbidden Planet maybe?
![]()
Whatever that banding/strapping material was, it took the metallic gold really well.
There is also a nice coffee stain down the side of the M-5 control box on the side of Kirk's chair. Maybe that's why M-5 went crazy; coffee in the circuits...![]()
"This unit must . . . de-caffeinate".![]()
Nomad looks more likely to make and dispense coffee.There is also a nice coffee stain down the side of the M-5 control box on the side of Kirk's chair. Maybe that's why M-5 went crazy; coffee in the circuits...![]()
"This unit must . . . de-caffeinate".![]()
Maybe M-5 also dispensed coffee. After all, what else would it expect of Kirk but sitting there and sipping a latte after it deemed him to be "non-essential personnel."
I'm hesitant to believe any original series related trivia when it comes from the mouth of Richard Arnold. I'm writing a fact check of his Mission Log interview currently, and it seems like he's fallen for a lot of Roddenberry's tall tales.
Also in "Arena' it's really obvious Captain Kirk is either wearing black climbing shoes or tennis shoes after he's transported from the Bridge to the alien Planet
yep, in the days of the original broadcasts and in the 1970ies, the above wasn't really visible or so blatantly obvious at the TV resolution of that era.
Arnold's "facts" aren't factual.
Arnold's "facts" aren't factual.
I think my "favorite" gaffe from that interview has to be Arnold's rant about how the WGA screwed Roddenberry and Coon out of the full writing credit for "Bread and Circuses."
Roddenberry and Coon share the "written by" credit for the episode. No other writer has a credit!
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