I was not aware of that... references, please?
I did an interview with Chambliss last month, it is from what he told me.
The magazine that commissioned the piece cancelled it in disgust and put me on MUTANT CHRONICLES, after weeks of paramount failing to deliver the cinematographer and ILM failing to deliver anybody, so I'm shopping the PD piece round by itself, though most mags seem to have either already gotten their Chambliss interviews and some other markets have gone non-paying (CFQ, you should be ashamed of yourselves.)
What do you think the problem is? Does Paramount no longer care about "behind the scenes" interviews?
While I'm at it, would your article have SHOWN us these early bridges with production concept art?
I have no idea what kinds of images we'd've wound up with, since supposedly nothing had been approved for publication according to the PR rep at Par and the PR guy at ILM, not even HD screengrabs, which to my editor and I sounded like bullshit.
When my editor worked at another mag, he and several other mags had no images supplied in time to run for their MI3 coverage, so you might think this was par(amount) for the course, but I know that on CLOVERFIELD images weren't too much of a problem.
Paramount has long semi-ignored certain genre publications and tech magazines, often only supplying stuff well after a useful date (which is why you often see trek coverage a month or more late in AC and mags like that.)
Except for around the turn of the century, when cooperation seemed very open (on INSURRECTION, and on TOMB RAIDER, for which I had to sign a ton of non-disclosures but otherwise had no problems), I've always had lots of problems with Paramount shows, going back to FC and GEN, and especially on TUC (if not for associate producer Brooke Breton, who basically sent me her whole trek phone list, there would have been no story and no images.)
And I should stress this TOS-looking bridge was an intermediate design, not an initial one: Chambliss' first take on the bridge was way way way too advanced looking in his opinion, hence the scaling back second approach before settling on something in between to actually build.
It'd be nice to see a making of or art of to see what these paths not taken look like.