I think the one thing we've learned about Gene over the years, is that he wasn't exactly a class act.![]()
Oh well.
I think the one thing we've learned about Gene over the years, is that he wasn't exactly a class act.![]()
Yeah, I'm just surprised that I keep discovering new scummy things he did.I think the one thing we've learned about Gene over the years, is that he wasn't exactly a class act.![]()
Having watched them within a day of each other recently, I was struck by how much TMP is almost more "The Cage: The Motion Picture" from the color palette, other aspects of the production design and the overall more serious tone.For me, most of my problems with TMP spring from the fact that they were trying to emulate 2001 rather than TOS.
I've asked this previously, but was the Titans Enterprise intended to be a refit, or was it just going to be "this is how the ship looks in the movies" like the TMP Klingons?The idea of the Enterprise being refit goes back farther than Phase II. It was a core concept of every effort to launch a new Trek movie/show in 1970s, going all the way back to Planet of the Titans.
Anyway... yes, I always felt that TMP was more along the lines of The Cage than the rest of the series, as if Gene was trying to realign Trek with his initial concept, more cerebral in tone and more visually subdued.
I do find it interesting that the test footage for Phase II looked about as colorful as TOS in the costuming and sets. It was a lot easier to see it as part of the same universe.
Agree, if only TMP had carried over these elements....
I do find it interesting that the test footage for Phase II looked about as colorful as TOS in the costuming and sets. It was a lot easier to see it as part of the same universe.
Kor
I think you need to read the thread.I hate reboots.
But if they are going to reboot it, please provide excellent soundtrack and also the Beautiful TOS Film Warp Drive Effects, especially from the 1979 TMP.![]()
If somebody is going to question that The 1979 film is a reboot, then so is TOS from its pilots. This is not like today's reboots. Reboots appear to erase everything from already existing stories.
Star Trek does not do that. It never did.
In the novelization, what we saw of the five-year mission was supposedly a dramatization. According to Roddenberry. So, yeah, I could see TMP as a reboot of sorts. He definitely seemed to spend the latter part of his life trying to distance Trek from TOS.
In the novelization, what we saw of the five-year mission was supposedly a dramatization. According to Roddenberry. So, yeah, I could see TMP as a reboot of sorts. He definitely seemed to spend the latter part of his life trying to distance Trek from TOS.
People today are overly focused on continuity, on whether one story "fits" with another. They assume there are only two options, perfect continuity or a wholesale reboot. But that hasn't historically been the case. The creators of ongoing series, or of revivals of older works, have frequently tweaked or altered the continuity as they went along. This was especially common in the past, when we didn't have the Internet and Wikia and home video and it wasn't as easy for fans to stay current on every tiny little detail, which meant there was more flexibility to rewrite continuity as needed. So a lot of things fall in between what modern fans would call a continuation and what they would call a reboot.
For example: In the pilot movie of The Six Million Dollar Man, Steve Austin was a civilian astronaut and the head of the bionics program was a hardnosed, manipulative government man named Oliver Spencer (Darren McGavin) who essentially forced Steve to work for the government because the government owned nearly half his body. But in the subsequent series, Austin was retconned into an Air Force colonel and Spencer was replaced with (the original novel's) Oscar Goldman, who started out as a government meanie like Spencer but evolved into a much nicer character, and Steve became a more willing (if often rebellious) agent. And when a later episode revisited the events of the pilot, they replaced Steve's original love interest from the movie with a different woman altogether -- different character name, different actress, but described in retrospect as having played the equivalent role to Barbara Anderson's character in the initial movie. It wasn't a complete reboot, the broad strokes of the pilot were still assumed to have happened, but the details of how they happened were subject to change as needed.
Then there's something like M*A*S*H, an 11-year series about a 3-year war. They played quite fast and loose with their own continuity and chronology. In the early seasons, it was often claimed to be 1952 and even 1953 eventually, but then later, after several cast changes, they did an episode that spanned "a year in the life" from the start of 1951 to the start of 1952, featuring the current cast only.
Then there's the way Marvel Comics has always approached continuity -- all the past events are assumed to have happened, but when and how they happened is subject to change. Tony Stark now created Iron Man in a cave in Afghanistan instead of Vietnam. Peter Parker's spider bite happened the same way, but now he had a cell phone at the time. The big-picture continuity is kept, the specifics are negotiable.
And this is the way Roddenberry approached TMP and TNG. They were continuations of TOS, but they were continuations of the general universe, not necessarily of every exacting detail. There was a lot about TOS that he was dissatisfied with, compromises he'd been forced to make due to budget or time restraints or network censorship, mistakes that had been made, things that had turned out badly. And so he wanted to keep the ideas that worked without being hamstrung by the stuff that didn't work so well. In his foreword to the novelization of TMP, he presented himself as a 23rd-century writer who'd produced an "inaccurately larger-than-life" dramatization of the Enterprise's real adventures, and who was now undertaking to do a better, more authentic dramatization with Admiral Kirk riding herd on him to make sure he got it right this time. So what we see as Star Trek, in this view, was just an artistic interpretation of the "real" Trek universe, and so any changes or discrepancies between different works were the result of poetic license or adaptational error.
So, in sum: Yes, both TMP and TNG were intended as what we'd now call "soft reboots," continuing the universe in broad strokes but reinterpreting the details and ignoring the bits he didn't like.
And if things had gone differently, if that early ambiguity had been resolved in the other direction, we'd now be talking about Trek's long history of reinventing its universe rather than its long history of having a consistent universe. A lot of that perception of consistency was only made solid after the fact, once the fans of first-generation Trek started writing and producing second-generation Trek and bringing their nostalgia to bear.
This is actually one of my favorite bits of trivia. Because it opens the door to a much more organic form of storytelling.
Indeed the idea that our fiction has to be perfectly internally consistent is a very new idea. Heck, in terms of human history the idea that there is only one "real" "canon" version of a story and anyone else is violating property rights by reinterpreting or retelling it is not only new but bordering on bizzare. Used to be in centuries and millenia past that most stories were just retellings of older stories, and new elements would be added in or changed according to what the storyteller thought was a good idea. I enjoy seeing this reflected in Star Trek; it seems like a much more natural and Human way of storytelling rather than prioritizing the adherence to "continuity."
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