Yes, and Kirk’s bodyguard gives Spock’s bodyguard a wary look when they first meet as if to say “Don’t try anything, buddy.”
Did James Doohan do the Guardian's voice? I can't remember...
JB
More money than Filmation had to spend, most likely. Union rules on animated series allow you to get up to three different voices per voice actor before they have to be paid more. Part of the reason that they hired James Doohan for TAS was because he could do lots of different voices & they could get more bang for their buck. Bringing in an additional actor just to record six lines of dialogue is not a good use of resources, budget wise.The absolute worst thing about the yesteryear episode of Star Trek the Animated Series was the ridiculous voice they used for the guardian! atrocious!
Bart LaRue with still alive when they "filmed" that episode.
I mean how much money would they have had to pay him to come in and record six lines of dialogue?
Ted Knight did a TON of cartoon voices, man. And he did a great job at it. TAS was lucky to have him.Sure, but why then hire Ted Knight to do the voice of Carter Winston?
Eh, 1972-1973 was largely a pre-videotape era. It wasn't as easy to double check that stuff. We don't even know for sure if Doohan recorded his lines for "Yesteryear" in Los Angeles, as a lot of the vocal tracks for TAS were recorded in whatever local studios the actors could find when they were doing other acting gigs all around the country.Or failing that maybe ask James Doohan to actually listen to the voice of the Guardian before he did his lines.
Starfleet had some time working on the Guardian before the time in Yesteryear. Maybe they repaired/updated its FWD, REV, PAUSE, STOP features.In the original episode, the Guardian could only display history in one manner & speed, and you had to jump in and hope for the best when you got somewhere close to the era you wanted. In "Yesteryear," Spock orders up a specific day and time in history like he's looking up a movie on Netflix.
BILLIONS.The Guardian must have been pretty bored waiting for thousands of years for someone to come ask it a question.![]()
GUARDIAN: A question. Since before your sun burned hot in space and before your race was born, I have awaited a question.
Well, he can't.All Kirk asked for was a playback of history. Spock asked for a specific date, a very different request. I find it unlikely that so powerful a device as the Guardian couldn't do both.
KIRK: Guardian. Can you change the speed at which yesterday passes?
GUARDIAN: I was made to offer the past in this manner. I cannot change.
GUARDIAN: I was made to offer the past in this manner. I cannot change.And yet Spock still didn't ask the same question as Kirk did. As I said, Kirk asked for a review of history. Spock asked for access to a specific date. That's two different things, not merely two different requests. Spock didn't ask for a review; he asked for specific access. If the Guardian can't grant that access, then it shouldn't be able to accept such a specific request. The fact that it did means it can do both. It's not just what you ask, but how you ask it. Even Harlan Ellison included a line about semantics in his original script.
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