So the secondary hull is the problem. Yes, it, too, can be swapped - that's the beauty of Jeffries' original modular approach. And it apparently was, between TOS and TMP, as its dimensions changed radically in that refit. But why would Starfleet keep doing these "refits" where every element of the ship is swapped for a different one?
So the secondary hull is the problem. Yes, it, too, can be swapped - that's the beauty of Jeffries' original modular approach. And it apparently was, between TOS and TMP, as its dimensions changed radically in that refit. But why would Starfleet keep doing these "refits" where every element of the ship is swapped for a different one?
I don't hear anyone suggesting that the entire crew got plastic surgery and had their vocal cords altered between this movie and TOS. It's accepted that even though Kirk, Spock, McCoy, etc. look and sound different, they're still supposed to be the same people.
Here's how I look at it:
I don't hear anyone suggesting that the entire crew got plastic surgery and had their vocal cords altered between this movie and TOS. It's accepted that even though Kirk, Spock, McCoy, etc. look and sound different, they're still supposed to be the same people. The differences in appearance are just different interpretations of the same thing.
So if the characters can be recast, why can't the ship be "recast" in the same way? If we can gloss over details like Kirk having blue eyes, McCoy having brown eyes, Scotty having a receding hairline, Chekov having curly hair, and Sulu being a tenor, then surely we can gloss over visual differences in how the Enterprise is depicted, and treat it simply as an alternate interpretation of the same thing.
I didn't like the altered proportions at first, but I'm getting used to it now. And I like the TMP-influenced elements. I figure the idea is supposed to be that Starfleet vessels "always" looked like that but we just didn't see them clearly in the original show. Kind of like how Roddenberry insisted that Klingons had always had bumpy heads despite what TOS showed us.
Worst of all, it doesn't look much like a precursor to The Motion Picture 1701, but more like a contemporary.
Worst of all, it doesn't look much like a precursor to The Motion Picture 1701, but more like a contemporary.
Is that really such a bad thing? As much as I like the TMP aesthetic, one thing that's always bugged me about it is how radically different it was from the TOS design style. It didn't seem to follow organically from previous designs, even though it was supposedly separated from TOS by only a few years. It's hard to buy such a radical, wholesale transformation in the design of everything in such a short period. If the idea of the new movie is that the Enterprise "really" looked like this all along, then that actually makes for a smoother progression to the TMP era; the new aesthetic doesn't just suddenly materialize out of nowhere.
As much as I like the TMP aesthetic, one thing that's always bugged me about it is how radically different it was from the TOS design style. It didn't seem to follow organically from previous designs, even though it was supposedly separated from TOS by only a few years. It's hard to buy such a radical, wholesale transformation in the design of everything in such a short period.
But why would Starfleet keep doing these "refits" where every element of the ship is swapped for a different one?
Timo Saloniemi
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