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How would the look of TOS have adapted to the 1970s?

Would the look of the 1970s have worked on TOS?

  • Yes! It would've been interesting to see TOS adapt to the new decade.

    Votes: 28 63.6%
  • No! The 70s were ugly, and it would've changed the look of TOS too much.

    Votes: 16 36.4%

  • Total voters
    44
Well, just looked it up and someone else is talking about the uniforms they were wearing in one scene being just too much like Starfleet to be believed!
JB
 
Really? I'm sure they are dressed in Starfleet uniforms, Urban!
JB

Well, just looked it up and someone else is talking about the uniforms they were wearing in one scene being just too much like Starfleet to be believed!
JB
What, you think I just make this stuff up? I saw it in its original run! ABC Movie of the Week! :rolleyes:

PtyW8itl.jpg
 
No of course I didn't think that and if you've read my second message you'd have seen that I read what a poster on the IMDB said about it as well! It was my mistake but others were fooled too! I think I saw it on YouTube with the heading about Phase II I'm sure though!
JB
 
This isn't an easy question to answer.

If the show had continued I don't think we would have seen any dramatic changes in the overall look of the show. That would have simply been money wasted.

In terms of hairstyles I think we already have an idea right in third season TOS. The cast was wearing their hair just a tad longer and fuller, but not drastically so. Not everyone in that time (in the real world) was instantly wearing long hair. And the show was not meant to reflect then contemporary fashions (beyond the miniskirt) as it was trying to depict a fictional future setting.

Flash forward to TMP and we can see that Shatner and Nichols are sporting the most drastic changes in hairstyles, and yet they still fit neatly into the overall Starfleet look.


Now if Phase II had actually happened we have glimpses in some of the sets and models built before TMP. And the hairstyles would probably have been like those seen on TMP.


Finally if TOS had been conceived in the 1970s then it becomes much more speculative. There's not just the influence of Forbidden Planet and other SF of the 1950s and early '60s, but also the SF of the late '60s and early '70s including 2001: A Space Odyssey and Planet Of The Apes that could have played an influence.
 
Finally if TOS had been conceived in the 1970s then it becomes much more speculative. There's not just the influence of Forbidden Planet and other SF of the 1950s and early '60s, but also the SF of the late '60s and early '70s including 2001: A Space Odyssey and Planet Of The Apes that could have played an influence.

For a space exploration show conceived in the early 70s, see Space: 1999:

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/5/53/S99Cast.jpg/220px-S99Cast.jpg
 
Despite whatever issues I have with Space: 1999 it did have some decent things in it. Yet it was a conceptual extension of U.F.O. and in some respects influenced by TOS. I recall writeups back in those days touting the show as out to eclipse Star Trek.

One thing to remember, too, is that a lot of SF of that period looked more near future rather than far future.
 
Since 1973-74 TAS was just an extension of the 1966-69 TOS, the 1977 Phase II and 1979 TMP define what a '70s Star Trek series would have looked like.
 
In addition to 2001 and Planet of the Apes, stuff like Easy Rider ('69) and Dirty Harry ('71) were making anti heroes popular as they grew out of westerns and into the mainstream.
I think we would have gotten some really good villains.
 
Except that something developed anew in the late seventies would not have looked exactly like something that carried over from the late sixties to the early seventies.

Kor
 
Except that something developed anew in the late seventies would not have looked exactly like something that carried over from the late sixties to the early seventies.

Kor
1979 TMP.

Examples of the post-Star Wars late '70s science-fiction television like Space Academy 1977-78, Jason of Star Command 1978-80, Battlestar Galactica 1978-79 and Buck Rogers In The 25th Century 1979-81.
 
1979 TMP.

Examples of the post-Star Wars late '70s science-fiction television like Space Academy 1977-78, Jason of Star Command 1978-80, Battlestar Galactica 1978-79 and Buck Rogers In The 25th Century 1979-81.

Cases in point.

Kor
 
What I found interesting when watching Mission: Impossible all the way through last year was that there wasn't a gradual shift from the 60's to the 70's style, the new decade suddenly hit the show like a brick wall with very little transition in its fourth season (or the one after Trek finished), to the point that it almost feels like a drastically different show stylistically. One that can only be called "Funky". Considering they were stablemates I'd have expected a tonal shift for Trek as well, at the very least musically.

One thing to note is that, whilst proper 70's haircuts might not have met real life military regulations it's fair to say that soldiers almost never had the right haircuts in 1970's film and TV because of actors being unwilling to trim. The New Avengers episode Dirtier by the Dozen has many fine examples, as does any Doctor Who UNIT story not directed by Douglas Camfield.
 
No idea, but someone did rerecord the theme in the mid-seventies for a spoken-word record album featuring Roddenberry.

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Pretty cool. But they felt like the TNG credits. :eek:

I think it is the long list of actors in the blue typeset.
 
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