I was (and am) a pretty huge fan of the TOS Movies. So huge, I wore out all the VHS tapes I had of them back in the '90s. I'd seen TUC tons of times, by the time I went to see GEN. I didn't care when I saw the TUC Bird-of-Prey blow up again. Why? Because I was also just as much of a Back to the Future Fan. And we saw lightning strike the Clock Tower in all three films.
I didn't think anything of the stock footage. I just accepted it as a thing. It was fun spotting it, and other stock footage in general, too. That doesn't mean anyone is wrong to point out they should've had new footage, just giving my perspective.
The only time it annoyed me was during DS9's "What We Leave Behind". It wasn't just "a shot here, a shot there," it was all over the place. They must've run out of budget by the end.
Even as a kid I recognized that. A future Blu-ray/UHD release really needs to edit in the ABC footage, etc. as well as the spacedock and Klingon scenes to something like this.I would think the idiots are the people who didn't realize that all of the Enterprise (and Klingon) footage for the first forty-five minutes (!) of The Wrath of Khan was used in two consecutive films. Including two fairly big set pieces. (People hate that cheap movie, right?)
It would have retroactively weakened the impact of the sequence in NEM, and probably not a great idea with civilians on board, but I might have been very forgiving of that in favor of the sheer spectacle of it if the E-D had rammed the BoP to destroy it. That would have also been much more acceptable justification for the following events than, "Ooops; looks like we took one hit too many."I could forgive them utilizing the stock explosion footage to save money if the battle itself were something special. But it wasn't. The Enterprise fired phasers a grand total of once. Until the final torpedo shot, that was the entirety of the Enterprise's resistance. Heck, we got to see more of an effort from the Enterprise on a TV budget in "The Survivors."
Not to mention that even with shields compromised, the Enterprise should have been able to kick the Bird of Prey's butt with no difficulty. Yes, they'd take some serious damage themselves due to the shields not working. But they still had way more powerful weapons. That BoP should have been toast in about 10 seconds.
But the Enterprise didn't need to run like hell! That's my point. All they needed to do was actually fire their weapons. Riker was absolutely incompetent in this battle.Now why the Enterprise didn't run like hell when her shields stopped working? No idea. I mean, I suppose they might have feared that the Klingons would kidnap Picard. Was that worth sacrificing a Galaxy class starship and all families on board? They certainly weren't going to be able to take a pot shot at Soran's sun killer missile under those conditions.
Reading this post makes me feel as though we saw different films.I'm not going to go to great lengths defending this as the greatest space battle of all time. It certainly was not. But it was better than Star Trek VI. (Ironic.)
(Have we ever seen the Enterprise in a fair fight? It's either against some pip-squeak with a trick, someone has managed to hamstring the ship, or it's like Metron or Q level of laughably overmatched. Or just way outnumbered. The classic Enterprise vs. D7 duel has never happened.)
But it was exciting, it was cinematic, and they never made BoPs out to NOT be dangerous. Especially when you don't have shields. It's not like this was one shot, one kill for the Durases. They engineered the odds in their favor and then they still got lucky. Mostly.
Now why the Enterprise didn't run like hell when her shields stopped working? No idea. I mean, I suppose they might have feared that the Klingons would kidnap Picard. Was that worth sacrificing a Galaxy class starship and all families on board? They certainly weren't going to be able to take a pot shot at Soran's sun killer missile under those conditions.
I agree with most of your post, except this part. The BoP was always shown to be significantly inferior to the Enterprise, even the refit original Enterprise and the Enterprise-A. In TSFS, for example, Captain Doc Brown is surprised that Kirk hasn't destroyed them and says they outgun him ten to one. That doesn't imply evenly matched ships.The E-A and a contemporaneous BoP (especially one that could fire while cloaked) were always implied to be more evenly matched than the E-D and an antiquated BoP.
I agree with most of your post, except this part. The BoP was always shown to be significantly inferior to the Enterprise, even the refit original Enterprise and the Enterprise-A. In TSFS, for example, Captain Doc Brown is surprised that Kirk hasn't destroyed them and says they outgun him ten to one. That doesn't imply evenly matched ships.
That's fair. I'll strike that.I agree with most of your post, except this part. The BoP was always shown to be significantly inferior to the Enterprise, even the refit original Enterprise and the Enterprise-A. In TSFS, for example, Captain Doc Brown is surprised that Kirk hasn't destroyed them and says they outgun him ten to one. That doesn't imply evenly matched ships.
What the Duras sisters should have done was destroy or at least cripple Main Engineering and/or the bridge with their first few shots. Unfortunately they're instead shown to be toying with the E-D in a scenario where time is their enemy, which proves out even with the miserable defense the E-D puts up.The main advantage, of course, is that the BoP could cloak. Which was the reason why both of them (Kruge's ship and Chang's) were able to do the damage they did.
Chang's definitely. It was a more sophisticated cloaking device that not only was harder to track, but allowed firing when cloaked.The main advantage, of course, is that the BoP could cloak. Which was the reason why both of them (Kruge's ship and Chang's) were able to do the damage they did.
Yeah, if the E had been fully crewed in TSFS (or Our Heroes had been more aggressive in their initial attack), things might have proceeded very differently.Chang's definitely. It was a more sophisticated cloaking device that not only was harder to track, but allowed firing when cloaked.
For Kruge's ship, I think it was more the fact that the Enterprise was already severely damaged from the battle with Khan. After all, Kirk and Sulu are able to visually spot the BoP even when cloaked and they get off the first shots. It's only the fact that the systems on the Enterprise break down that ultimately allows Kruge to get the upper hand.
Here's the thing; I don't think the emotion chip was necessary as a plot point. I mean, yeah, who doesn't want to see Data with emotions? But at the same time, from my perspective and I've observed a bunch of other people with this same opinion; that Data, this whole time, had emotions. He just experienced them differently because he's an android. I can probably find clips of this, which I may reply to this post with said clips later. I understand the purpose of the emotion chip but I think it was unneccesary.it also started the Data-emotion-chip plot
Here's the thing; I don't think the emotion chip was necessary as a plot point. I mean, yeah, who doesn't want to see Data with emotions? But at the same time, from my perspective and I've observed a bunch of other people with this same opinion; that Data, this whole time, had emotions. He just experienced them differently because he's an android. I can probably find clips of this, which I may reply to this post with said clips later. I understand the purpose of the emotion chip but I think it was unneccesary.
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