No, it doesn't say 1200m for the final size. The 725m length is mentioned in the well-hidden Note 4 associated with the chart.
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Bottom line: THEY DIDN'T KNOW WHAT THE FRACK THEY WERE DOING!!
You rarely get an agreed-upon size by finding consistency in VFX shots, you get it when the designer hardwires the number into the design itself, by adding features which cannot work at any other scale. The Ent-D isn't 2108 feet long because we made a thorough analysis of TNG effects shots and determined that it was always scaled consistently next to other ships, but rather because Andrew Probert designed the miniature with such a length in mind, so it isn't really possible to rescale it lest the detailing stops making sense.
Here's the 2009 Enterprise stuff, supporting a 1200 meter size:
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Top and front shots of the Enterprise model are Tobias Richter's.
Here is the early size chart from the "Art of the Movie" book, which the CG model appears to have been actually built and detailed to. Even in the shipyard scene, where the ship model is scaled down to 1200 feet (366m), the explosed decks support the 1200m figure (which has been fudged Excelsior-style down to 725m)
But my original point is this: Why fudge at all? Why not just say Excelsior is 700-777m, the refit Enterprise ~350m, nuEnterprise 1200m, etc.? Has anyone considered that the last few technical manuals may have sold a little better if the statistics matched what was on-screen in Star Trek, especially in an age where we've got the technology to easily spot a bogus figure?
A very popular school, I hear. The producers of TNG and DS9 are among its best known graduates.Bottom line: THEY DIDN'T KNOW WHAT THE FRACK THEY WERE DOING!!
They studied at the Star Trek III School for Haphazard Starship Scaling.
Some of the detailing DOESN'T make sense, especially in discrepancies between interior and exterior set design.You rarely get an agreed-upon size by finding consistency in VFX shots, you get it when the designer hardwires the number into the design itself, by adding features which cannot work at any other scale. The Ent-D isn't 2108 feet long because we made a thorough analysis of TNG effects shots and determined that it was always scaled consistently next to other ships, but rather because Andrew Probert designed the miniature with such a length in mind, so it isn't really possible to rescale it lest the detailing stops making sense.
That would be
the aforementioned middle finger to the fanbase.
More likely, it's a complete and utter lack of any serious consideration for the feelings of viewers "who actually pay attention to what they watch." Evidently, he was too busy directing a 128 minute film to notice the 12 seconds of footage--all of which are post-production FX shots--that contain slight scaling inconsistencies for the Enterprise.Apparently, JJ and his merry band are under the impression that one of the kitchy charms of the original series is blatant technical inconsistency, so in his own twisted, sick way, having the Enterprise shift sizes from shot to shot is his idea of an homage to TOS.
That, or it's a big honking middle finger to those of us who actually pay attention to what we watch.
What an asshole, right?
You do know that the director is also responsible for the effects shots, right? The effects people do what the director tells them to do.
^He may not stand over the effects peoples' shoulders while they work, but he tells them what he needs them to do, then reviews the final footage for approval or disapproval. In the end, it's his call.
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