The more they keep the "pictures" to simple and innocent things like the back of a stage, or the clapperboard... the more I start to think that they're worried fans will throw a tantrum when they start releasing actual shots...
Star Trek fans? Never...
While I agree to an extent, I do feel that the fandom makes good points.
While I'm a new poster, and certainly don't want to be stirring the pot so early on, I have been a long-time lurker here. That said, I know
some folks here don't seem to think canon matters all that much, etc. Some. Not all.
However, my point is simply this; I hope the folks behind ST

respect the Prime Timeline's canon to a respectful extent. If they want to change
everything, give a new look to
everything, then they should have created a new timeline.They could have easily have done that.
However, even if they do change everything up... I'm still going to watch the show for its entertainment value. I'm not going to be throwing a fantrum.
Careful, friend... Keep up talk like that and sooner or later folks will start flaming you for failing to recognize and accept that
Star Trek is a property with which the producers can do absolutely anything they want -- in the Prime timeline (which doesn't really exist, mind you) or in any other part of the multiverse as they so choose. Red Andorians, frozen Tholians, Wolf 359 a hundred years early, Jamie T. Kirk being female, militaristic Tribbles, and more. And if you don't like it as a customer, well, that's too bad for you.
Like they created a new timeline after changing everything and giving everything a new look in 1979? If they want to refresh the look and bring it up to date, while still having it in the same timeline, well there's already a precedent for doing so.
I think the difference is that TMP took place after TOS. Styles change over time, and that's fine. I don't see a lot of Ford Pintos on the roads, tight butt-hugging bell bottoms on men, or poodle skirts on women these days either.
The TOS-era general style had been around for quite some time, and when the
Enterprise came home -- after multiple missions under different captains -- it was just time for one of those changes. I think it would have been very different if the producers had said "Hey, we're going to set TMP in mid 2250s during the same time period as
The Cage, but we're going to ignore everything established about that time period and do whatever we want instead." That would have been a reboot.
I never really bought the idea that TMP was a continuation of TOS, in anything other than the broadest of broad strokes.
I think it was -- but the execution was deeply flawed. We had all the right ingredients: A lunatic Admiral taking over and endangering the ship, a weird space alien to get to know and try to defeat, the
Enterprise and a crew of well-knowns characters, and more.
The main problems, as I see them, were that
James Kirk was the lunatic admiral, that the whole Kolinahr business with Spock replaced a rich character with an almost mindless robot (and stole any chance of seeing some good character moments with McCoy like in TWOK), and that the film went way
way overboard with the special effects.
Well they will have to update the look some but I think they will keep enough of the TOS look in to make it gel. I wish they would go the route that ST: Ent. went when they did their mirror episode. They managed to update the look of a 2260s connie but adding a few computer graphics and changing the lighting. The bridge on that episode looked fantastic.
I loved what the ENT people did with the
Defiant. I'll grant you that I don't think even that bridge would pass muster as a futuristic workstation and is basically fanwank, but it does show that the potential is there to design something that is mostly consistent and stays respectful to what came before.
There's also no reason why TOS-era ships couldn't look great largely unchanged.
@Vektor 3D modeled some fantastic designs, including Franz Joseph's
Constitution, and with good lighting and presentation, the old work looks amazing.
