Who knew Threshold would be more watchable in animation?
They did a really good job of getting the feel of the TOS cartoon...

Who knew Threshold would be more watchable in animation?
They did a really good job of getting the feel of the TOS cartoon...
I'm not entirely certain, but I think it may very well have been (and a cursory Google search agrees with me) no less than Chuck Jones who first applied the term "illustrated radio" to limited animation. Precisely because it fails (and fails miserably) to convey any convincing illusion of motion.
I think it's kind of ridiculous, the coincidence that the Enterprise just happens to run into Cyrano Jones, tribbles, and Koloth while protecting a shipment of a triticale variant for Sherman's Planet again. It's the worst way to do a sequel, just rehashing the original through contrived circumstances. Compare that to something like "Once Upon a Planet," which feels very different from the episode it's a sequel to because it takes the story in new directions.
And the way the battle plays out makes no sense. The Klingon stasis weapon freezes the transporter the first time, but not the second time. Moreover, Kirk not only threatens to beam the tribbles over, he actually does it preemptively. That's not how a threat works. You hold the threat in reserve -- let us go or we'll fill your ship with tribbles. By beaming the tribbles over first, Kirk loses all his leverage. He's already done his worst, so Koloth has nothing to lose by continuing the attack. It's nonsensical writing.
Who knew Threshold would be more watchable in animation?![]()
Haha. I like the silly little music they used from the animated series when the slug children of Paris and Janeway slither into their hole....Who knew Threshold would be more watchable in animation?![]()
In Evangelion, Gendo Ikari giving long lectures with his hands clasped in front of his mouth and his glasses blanked over by dramatic glare. One single frame, with a slow zoom in for the duration of the whole speech.Anyway, it's always puzzled me that Americans are far more critical of the limited animation in '60s-'70s American cartoons than they are of the equally limited and recycled animation that's always been commonplace in anime imports from Japan, even to this day. Anime often uses the same kinds of animation-saving tricks Filmation used -- long, slow pans across static backgrounds, characters motionless except for their mouths, characters shot from behind as they talk so even their mouths don't have to be animated, etc. Yet for some reason, nobody complains about it the way they do about Filmation doing the exact same things.
At the start of TMP, we have Will Decker as Captain (though his shoulder insignia has only two solid bars suggesting he was only on Commander rank?) and who was to be his First/Executive Officer? Commander Sonak was coming aboard to be its new Science Office, no mention of Executive Officer, so maybe not him. Scotty was the only other one of Commander rank on the ship, but he seems to be charge of the Enterprise Refit from Starfleet Engineering and not the ship's Chief of Engineering; maybe I'm wrong and he's supposed to Executive too but too busy with the engineering problems. When Kirk "demoted" Decker to Commander and made him Executive Officer, there seems to be no downstream bumping suggesting that there was no Executive Officer assigned to the ship, unless Lt. Cmd. Sulu or Lt. Cmd. Uhura was to be the Executive Officer but I doubt it if full Commander Sonak is coming aboard? Chekov had the rank of Lt. (or Lt. j.g. in early promo's?), so, definitely not him. Pre-TMP Executive Officer options:And based on where they are at the end of TMP, and where they are in WOK (physically and, in the case of kirk, emotionally), I think we're safe in assuming that many of the familar bridge crew served on this mission, at least for a time.
And based on where they are at the end of TMP, and where they are in WOK (physically and, in the case of kirk, emotionally), I think we're safe in assuming that many of the familar bridge crew served on this mission, at least for a time.
After TMP, who takes over the Enterprise? Probably not Kirk since he is still an Admiral and Chief of Starfleet Operations.
TMP: Admiral Kirk saves the Earth and they demote him.No, Kirk was demoted to captain's rank for the V'Ger mission, as you can see in his insignia. I figure that was the tradeoff Nogura demanded for giving him the ship back.
Haha. I like the silly little music they used from the animated series when the slug children of Paris and Janeway slither into their hole....![]()
Hm, for me it's different ... the very outdated animation
(the same music over and over again in every single episode)
Well. Let's be fair. They had about 30 minutes of music composed for TAS. And it's GREAT music. You may find Clone Wars repetitive, but it isn't literally an hour or even two spread over many seasons of episodes.Common practice.
After TMP, who takes over the Enterprise? Probably not Kirk since he is still an Admiral and Chief of Starfleet Operations.
No, Kirk was demoted to captain's rank for the V'Ger mission, as you can see in his insignia. I figure that was the tradeoff Nogura demanded for giving him the ship back.
We can't really assume that, because the implication in TWOK (made overt in the novel, I think) was that the crew had been apart for some time and had reunited for Kirk's birthday training cruise.
Kirk found himself feeling very comfortable as he settled himself back into the center seat. He was realizing that there was a certain shrewd and sometimes ruthless commanding admiral down there, who right now would be unable to deny him anything—even permanent command of the Enterprise if Kirk demanded it. Well, that suited former Admiral James Tiberius Kirk fine. He did not intend to let Heihachiro Nogura get off this hook.
Chapter 2 Page 41 of the 'Wrath of Khan' novelization has this quote from McCoy as part of a piece of extended dialogue from the apartment scene where Kirk and McCoy are celebrating Kirk's birthday - "Bull. You never should have given up the Enterprise after Voyager."
I quickly read the opening chapters of 'The Wrath of Khan' novelization and the only mention I could find of the crew being apart comes from Chapter 3 pages 59-62 when the shuttle leaves Earth and is approaching Enterprise, when Kirk says to Sulu that it's good to see him again and that it has been a long time.
Then Kirk congratulates Sulu on his promotion to Captain, who will take command of the Excelsior at the end of the month. That's really the only mention of the crew being apart from each other.
In my head cannon after the conclusion of the second FYM, Kirk is promoted to Admiral again and takes a post teaching at Starfleet Academy, Spock is promoted to Captain of the Enterprise, which is turned into a training vessel. Scotty stays onboard as Chief of Engineering. McCoy works for, or becomes head of, Starfleet Medical. Uhura becomes an instructor at the Academy or an aide to Kirk. Chekov is promoted to Commander and becomes First Officer of the Reliant.
Then again TWOK ended with "I feel young!" and TSFS began with "The death of Spock is like an open wound." Kirk is apparently a mercurial fellow.
I do love the music for TAS. Something about it is soothing. Maybe it reminds me of my childhood watching the few episodes that I caught in reruns and reminds me of some of the other filmation shows I watched like He-man. It might also be that certain quality of sound crispness that the filmation shows had. The sound quality just seemed different than other shows. It's nice. The music itself was well written.I remember when people (you know.... PEOPLE) were bagging on the animation in Star Wars: Rebels. I asked them (again... THEM) what was better. And they started telling me about PIXAR MOVIES. I was all like "OK, go watch some Strawberry Shortcake 3D or some of the other stuff that is in the same price point as Rebels and then we will have an actual conversation." That's like saying "The FX in TOS were garbage!" "Compared to what?" "2001: A Space Odyssey." Ummmmm...
For all the crap the TAS gets for it's limited animation they skip over the fact that the likenesses are pretty terrific. And the robot grain ships and the Huron are some of my favorite Trek ships ever.
Well. Let's be fair. They had about 30 minutes of music composed for TAS. And it's GREAT music. You may find Clone Wars repetitive, but it isn't literally an hour or even two spread over many seasons of episodes.
OTOH, while they had MORE music it's shocking (these days) to hear how much of TOS is tracked.
I do love the music for TAS. Something about it is soothing. Maybe it reminds me of my childhood watching the few episodes that I caught in reruns and reminds me of some of the other filmation shows I watched like He-man.
That's unexpected, since He-Man was the first Filmation show to be scored by Shuki Levy & Haim Saban instead of the stalwarts "Yvette Blais & Jeff Michael" (i.e. Ray Ellis & Norm Prescott) who'd scored pretty much every Filmation show from 1970-82. And it had a completely different musical style, purely electronic in place of Ellis & Prescott's usual orchestral/jazzy style.
They had about 30 minutes of music composed for TAS. And it's GREAT music.
When I watched some TAS episodes again after not seeing them since (probably) they first aired, I was amazed how the music instantly put me back in the stories. I'm fairly sure that when I'm senile, I'll still recognize the DAA-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-DAA-DAA-DAA!I do love the music for TAS. Something about it is soothing. Maybe it reminds me of my childhood watching the few episodes that I caught in reruns and reminds me of some of the other filmation shows I watched like He-man. It might also be that certain quality of sound crispness that the filmation shows had. The sound quality just seemed different than other shows. It's nice. The music itself was well written.
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