In the old "Making of Star Trek" by Stephen Whitfield, we are treated to some evolving outlines for the original pilot. At this stage, the ship is called the Yorktown and the captain is named April. Among these differences, I found it particularly intriguing that Roddenberry described the telepathic beings as being "crab-like". Distinctive to be sure, as it breaks from the cliche (trope, whatever) of fat headed humanoids to imply superior mental abilities. (Since 1982 when I think of this treatment, I imagine something akin to the Garthim costumes from "The Dark Crystal".)
But given this was something intended for television instead of a theatrical release, why would GR even bother describing the Talosians as crustaceans knowing it would be flat out impossible to achieve on a TV budget and time restraint? Was he that clueless as to what was practical for TV, or did he describe them as such as some kind of mental exercise, a "placeholder" technique so that he could focus more upon the story structure?
Hopefully, Harvey can chime in with some concrete facts.
But given this was something intended for television instead of a theatrical release, why would GR even bother describing the Talosians as crustaceans knowing it would be flat out impossible to achieve on a TV budget and time restraint? Was he that clueless as to what was practical for TV, or did he describe them as such as some kind of mental exercise, a "placeholder" technique so that he could focus more upon the story structure?
Hopefully, Harvey can chime in with some concrete facts.