TOS-R is always shown in widescreen on UK TV, It's on CBS Action 1.78:1 SD.
Though it is no longer on the regular schedule anymore, Space (the Canadian sci-fi cable channel that will be the only broadcast channel in the world to carry the new show once it appears) was having a 50th anniversary marathon on Labour Day Weekend and was broadcasting TOS-R in widescreen. Was a lot more jarring than the new FX.When was TOS-R ever broadcast in widescreen?
I know the new effects were rendered in WS, but as far as I know the actual show has never been shown that way.
Which makes me wonder WHY the effects were ever made in 16:9 in the first place (especially since the live action footage is, and always has been, 4:3).
If only you were serious.OMG HELL YES! I'm inspired now. I'm going to run out and find my Chevelle from when I was a kid and drive it just like it was then too because that's what I drove and it's still great now! I'm also going to get my VCR and start watching TOS on that again! I'm not talking about my fancy hi-fi stereo one that I watched latter STNG on in surround sound, no siree! I MEAN the one from the 80s that sounded like they were talking in my closet! That was the ultimate viewing experience. 240p is divine! Woo hoo!!
RAMA
Use a heavy hand to modernize that Chevelle and watch its value plummet...If only you were serious.
"New" Does not automatically mean "better" you know.
I don't think widescreen is the issue. It's just how well it looks in HD. There are no presently existing versions of the original effects that look good enough for broadcast in HD, period. The TOS-R VFX win by default, which says nothing about how good they are and whether an option that is superior to them either presently is or ever was feasible.
Do they really?! I wonder how much their ears burned when fans started stating their opinions about the multiple Blu-ray version Star Trek Into Darkness release...
STC does a fine job of recreating the TOS look in terms of f/x but they, too, take liberties as well in terms of questionable f/x. Also the artist makes a difference and their most recent episode is clearly not Doug Drexler's work and looks more like TOS-R in some shots. That said STC's shuttlecraft and hangar deck makes TOS-R's look shameful.I say this every time, and I know it's done with he benefit of a decade of VFX advancement, but Star Trek Continues' VFX blows TOS-R out of the water for its sheer authenticity. The shots all look like something from the era and they fit with the live action.
My only issue with Continues' FX is the way stars stream by like space dust in recent episodes. That's been a pet peeve of mine forever. When Enterprise did it for sublight scenes I just wanted to scream "That's not how space works!"
The Laughing Vulcan said:Now if TOS-R is the only version that networks will broadcast (probably because it's widescreen)
When was TOS-R ever broadcast in widescreen?
I know the new effects were rendered in WS, but as far as I know the actual show has never been shown that way.
Japan market specifically I believe was the target for the WS versions.It's being screened that way right now on Australian television.
It appears that the 'widescreen' versions were originally made for international sale, although they may have slipped into syndication packages in the US as well by now?? I don't know about that, but I can confirm that here in Australia we've only ever seen the WS versions of TOS-R broadcast on TV as far as I know.
The upside is that the new CGI effects are presented in all their uncropped widescreen glory. The downside is that the live-action footage is cropped instead.![]()
Japan market specifically I believe was the target for the WS versions.
Always with the hating! Why not focus on the positives? I swear, sometimes all Trek fans seem to do is be negative about the thing they supposedly love.
Well, to be fair, the original Battlestar Galactica only had about six FX shots to remaster.In contrast, I watched the original Battlestar Galactica series on Bluray last year, which actually did remaster its effects, and they blow, not only TOS-R out of the water, but TNG-R as well. Not bad for a show from 1979.
Gotta love the irony.Saw The Man Trap in the IMAX theatre on the National Mall in Washington DC the other night to celebrate the 50th anniversary of its initial airing. Was really something to see it that way. Perhaps it goes without saying, they showed the CGI effects. I heard no complaints, and this was the same crowd (including me) who couldn't take their eyes off the newly restored 11 foot filming model.
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