How many second season episodes were produced that were affected by the writers strike?
I'm curious, who was allowed to rewrite and improvise the writing during writers strike? Who were not allowed to write?
EDIT: Oh, and one other production affected by a writers' strike was the 2009 Star Trek movie. A strike was on during the time it was filmed, so the script couldn't be rewritten during production -- not even by J.J. Abrams, I think, since he's a writer as well as a director and thus a WGA member. Thus, once the strike ended, Abrams had to make what story adjustments he could during post-production, through creative editing and redubbing of dialogue. I'm not sure if there were any reshoots, though such things are pretty common on big-budget movies these days, so there were probably some.
Regarding WAR OF THE WORLDS season 1, I actually really enjoyed it. Agreed, though, that season 2 was a major letdown.
There's a moment in the 2009 film when after the mind meld Kirk says to Old Spock "going back in time, you changed all our lives", as if suggesting that it was Spock's time traveling that actually changed the timeline, as opposed to Nero's. Is that a residue of the original shooting script?
I understand Nero would have originally been in a Klingon prison according to deleted scenes, but that's the only big change I recall aside from Kirk's brother being omitted.
Regarding WAR OF THE WORLDS season 1, I actually really enjoyed it. Agreed, though, that season 2 was a major letdown.
If nothing else, season 2's premiere set up the dystopian nature not unreasonably well.
Yeah, but the season that followed was deeply unpleasant and grim, as well as badly written. And while season 2's portrayal of a world ruined by the long-term aftereffects of the devastating 1953 invasion made more sense than season 1's portrayal of an intact world that had completely forgotten about it, there was no attempt made to explain the transition from one to the other.
Worst of all is the fact that the new producer, Frank Mancuso Jr., killed off the two nonwhite members of the cast and brought in several new white regulars. And his excuses for killing off Ironhorse and Norton were unconvincing. He claimed he was somehow unaware that Ironhorse was the fan-favorite character, and he claimed that Norton couldn't work in season 2 because he was in a wheelchair and the team would lose their home base and be on the run -- except he then gave them a new home base at the start of the very next episode, so it was just a blatantly false excuse for not wanting a black guy in a wheelchair in the show. In fact, the new regime didn't seem to want any kind of diversity at all, since Harrison Blackwood lost all his charming eccentricities and became a generic lead whose only distinctive personality trait was a beard.
I remember watching the War of the Worlds TV show (and not liking it very much). Wasn't that the show that tried to make the viewers believe that almost no one remembered the 1953 alien invasion and/or some government coverup BS?
The strike was actually at the end of the first season of TNG. The episodes most affected were "We'll Always Have Paris," whose climax had to be semi-improvised on set because they couldn't get it properly rewritten, and "The Neutral Zone," which was written in haste and with little opportunity for revision, which is why it was such a weak, unfocused episode.
Contrary to popular belief, the season-ending clip show "Shades of Gray" had nothing to do with the strike, which had been over for months by that point. Clip shows have long been a routine practice in television, done in order to save money and time -- and they still need someone to write the framing scenes, so they couldn't be written during a strike anyway. The producers agreed to do a clip show that could be shot in 3 days as a way to compensate for their time and budget overruns on "Elementary, Dear Data" and "Q Who" earlier in the season.
That's right. The show explained it partly as a coverup and partly collective denial, but also tied it into UFO lore by asserting that aliens had some sort of natural amnesia-inducing effect on humans who encountered them. It never really made sense, though, because what about the global devastation of cities and the death toll dwarfing WWII?
I think "The Neutral Zone" still worked quite well
Darren at the Movie Blog notes the 24th century humanity is superior bias of the first couple of years of TNG rears its ugly head here. The crew (except Data) seem too smug toward their guests instead of interested in meeting their ancestors.
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