Having watched that, I don't see what the fuss was about. TOS-R was able to add to the eps visually and generally did a good job for the budget they had.
Think of it in terms of what Eden FX would have brought to the table vs. what CBS-D brought to the table.
CBS-Digital had not attempted something of this magnitude before...whereas EdenFX were well established and knew their craft quite well.
Eden FX had the experience under their belts to make new FX, yet also make it blend far more seamlessly than CBS-Digital was able to do. With a few notable exceptions (space seed especially) the work of CBS-D jumped out as being CGI and did not look like it was part of the same show.
Looked pretty darn good to me.
The demo from Eden FX looks like what TOS could have been in the 60's with a motion picture budget.
Maybe, but for whatever reason they couldn't go with Eden so they did what they could, and it was more than acceptable to me.
The model work was art, and I think we need to be more respectful and mindful of that when doing restorations of shows like this.
I might rate this argument higher if the model work wasn't so dang
static. I got bored with the constant use of the same few "pose" shots of the Enterprise just sitting in the middle of the screen with a hint of starfield movement behind it attempting to give the scene a little "kick".
If there was any real movement at all from just about ANY model, it was very basic and simplistic. Overall, the FX came out "stuffy" as a result.
And they reused and reused and reused models from the movies to save money. At the time it was the best they could do, and they didn't do a half-bad job. But they can go back in, for example, and use Andy's original
Ambassador design. They could give us some new Klingon ships instead of constantly reusing the BoP model, and the beautiful CG
Enterprise that they made for "These Are the Voyages". They could finally fix that stupid, inaccurate mock up of the Type 7.They could give us (as they did with TOS-R) a host of new camera angles on all the ships.
As long as it was supervised by the Okudas, Sternbach, et al, I'm confident we would not be disappointed by the results.