Turns out that very lengthy Forbidden Planet essay was just the first half of the analysis! Here's part 2:
https://www.centauri-dreams.org/?p=38365
https://www.centauri-dreams.org/?p=38365
New post today!
http://startrekfactcheck.blogspot.com/2017/11/the-most-interesting-article-in-world.html?m=1
Thanks to @Myko for getting me to fully pursue this one and actually write up my findings.
New post today!
http://startrekfactcheck.blogspot.com/2017/11/the-most-interesting-article-in-world.html?m=1
Thanks to @Myko for getting me to fully pursue this one and actually write up my findings.
Holy crap that fellow meanders. For instance, he goes on for pages about the hyperdrive, which is basically a throwaway in the film. I skipped over tons of it.Hey, Harvey, I thought you might like to know (if you don't already) that Star Trek Fact Check was just cited on the Centauri Dreams space-science blog, in a very lengthy guest essay about Forbidden Planet and its influence on SF:
https://www.centauri-dreams.org/?p=38363
Holy crap that fellow meanders. For instance, he goes on for pages about the hyperdrive, which is basically a throwaway in the film. I skipped over tons of it.
I get that now, but he still meanders a lot.
Copy editor question: "sixth actor on this list"? His name is second on the memo excerpt.
That's a far cry from this guy's overlong, unfocused walk through the film wherien he angles off into any and all the topics it makes him think about. But I suppose that's de rigueur for writing on the internet: information density at the expense of focus.
Fixed! (And, also, if you're not careful, you'll be drafted into this position).
Long winded, yes. Rambling? No. They are exhaustive and occasionally exhausting. But I can't say I ever came away thinking "Yeah, but did he cover THIS part?" There is no stone left unturned in a given area of stones. A valuable asset to Star Trek history.@Maurice Bless you for suggesting my indulgent, long-winded ramblings are "methodical."![]()
BTW, that kind of blows my mind that this particular piece of incorrect folklore came from the updated Concordance. Of course it was the original Concordance that gave us the Enterprise as a Constellation Class Starship. That wound its way around books and whatnot through much of the 80's.
I also think the first edition of Asherman's Compendium was better than its successor.
Cash Markman said:As for the story’s origin, Sohl recalled, “I was thinking, suppose you ran across a cube in space. A cube is so damn finitive [sic] and so square and so unlike nature, that you know right away it represents intelligent life. ‘What is it doing there?’ It’s like an electronic warning system at the frontier.” (160-2)
Sohl’s outline from March 1966 was called “Danger Zone.” It was rough, of course. Many of the characters of the series, as well as the technology of the Enterprise, were still on the drawing boards. Sohl was paid for the outline and then rewrote it for free, with a title change to “The Corbomite Maneuver,” now emphasizing the bluff Kirk plays to save his ship.
They could have hired Jim Henson.Also, Balok is not the child-like alien he would become in subsequent drafts (this version would have been much more expensive). For more on these and other differences, read on:
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