^^ What is apparent is that you evidently don't understand the essential point trying to be made. And it couldn't have been made more clearly.
Respect the original production. You see that as a limitation when it's not. It could look wonderful and would actually be a more faithful and dedicated effort than the cartoons CBS animators cooked up with TOS-R.
TAS was produced by Filmation, not CBS. And, while the alien ships were really wacky, the Federation ships were all in line with the TOS style.
Make it look like it is all of the same production in a seamless manner rather than what is obviously two distinctly different productions separated by forty years and spliced together.
Just like how well TOS meshes with the rest of the franchise?
I, and others, have explained it enough. If you don't get it at this point then we're wasting our time.
Since the show was made in the past, and the remaster was merely supposed to clean up the existing images, yes, that's the point he's trying to make.
And they did. You can buy the broadcast versions in complete season for Blu-Ray or DVD. The CGI "remastering" is just an additional way to experience the story (just like how some of the movies have extended cuts). And a darn good way to boot.
Starfleet doesn't exist. Star Trek was a TV show. The TV show had two ship designers, Matt Jefferies and Wah Chang. To keep the feel of the original show as they promised, any new ships should carry one of those men's design ethic.
The Starfleet point was an "un-universe" explanation why we it's not a problem that we now have different designers contributing models and stuff to the same series. And the point you're missing is that TOS-R
was faithful to the original designs. They didn't stick ENT or TOS movie style-tech into it. Every single new ship created looked like something that could've been made back in the day.
The point is sailing over your head. They didn't have CGI in 1969. The point is to keep the show looking like it looked originally, only with cleaner images. The effects shouldn't look any different than they did originally in terms of content, just cleaned up visually.
Dude, they did that, you can buy copies of the cleaned-up broadcast versions. And, no offense, but the broadcast versions had some gosh-awful effects and cinematography (and I'm saying this as a long-time TOS fan who grew up watching the original versions).
And finally, most of the new effects
were exactly the same designs in the old show, just recreated to be crystal clear. Finally, why does a version, who's point of existence is to improve on the original effects, need to look exactly like it did back in the day? You might as well have just watched a HD version of the original effects.
Finally, TOS was never about the effects, it was about the story and the characters. That's why we're still watching this program 50 years after the fact. And if this facelift, which was faithful to the original series design while still making it fresh and new, gets more people a chance to enjoy it (people who would otherwise choke on the outdated effects), then it has more than justified its existence.
While CGI was the only affordable way to replace the original effects, the CGI should simply have duplicated the original effects exactly, in terms of action and angles. It doesn't matter if CGI can do something clever that models couldn't do in 1966-69, because it would be out of place in a 50-year-old TV show.
As stated before, the cinematography was really bad, so how would replicating it be a good thing? Also, some of the best stuff
was the new angles, the fact that the
Enterprise now moved more, that we got to see the shuttles do turns, etc. It made the series feel more real.
Finally, this isn't the first time we had CGI
Enterprise effects. "Trials and Tribble-latons" (DS9) did. Should that show (praised for faithfully re-creating the TOS setting) have just recycled TOS footage for the
Enterprise, K-7, etc., rather than re-creating those models with the best technology they had on hand at the time?