The use of what I just thought was some large factory for the ship interior for engineering was just dumb to me. I guess I could rationalize it for being the engineering section and the deep under-workings of the ship, when Kirk is running through the tanks I can see those as being the antimatter pods, deuterium tanks, or what-have you. I can make some sense of it.
Yeah, I sort of think that a 23rd century space-ship might not have metal grating, scaffolding and catwalks but, whatever.
That all falls apart when Uhura, a communications officer, is working between a bunch of large tanks with valves and pipes on them and you can see a giant steel wall in the background with rivets and shit in it.
Uhura is a linguist and likely was working an a language lab or something, so it sort of breaks any "reality" to see her working on a computer thats station between giant tanks with valves and junk on it.
Shit like that was hard to ignore and justify.
Yeah, I sort of think that a 23rd century space-ship might not have metal grating, scaffolding and catwalks but, whatever.
That all falls apart when Uhura, a communications officer, is working between a bunch of large tanks with valves and pipes on them and you can see a giant steel wall in the background with rivets and shit in it.
Uhura is a linguist and likely was working an a language lab or something, so it sort of breaks any "reality" to see her working on a computer thats station between giant tanks with valves and junk on it.
Shit like that was hard to ignore and justify.