I was wathing "The Apple" the other night, and in the final scene, Kirk is shown coming up the ladder from someplace into the corridor. When the set was constructed, was the corridor build elevated from the ground level, or did the ladder system go down into a sub-level of some sort?
I've always wondered in real life how far it went down, the same way I've always wondered how far down the batpoles really went in the set build for Bruce Wayne's study on the 1960's Batman. I was another great example of little ways to make the sets seem much bigger than they really were.
I've always wondered in real life how far it went down, the same way I've always wondered how far down the batpoles really went in the set build for Bruce Wayne's study on the 1960's Batman. I was another great example of little ways to make the sets seem much bigger than they really were.


Well, in relative terms, obviously. If the "deck" below the one portrayed by the set does not exist, but in fact consists of solid concrete or bedrock without convenient pits in it, one can't descend to "it" - but even though the "deck" above the one portrayed by the set is equally fictional, one can certainly descend from "it", simply by climbing atop the set first. And in reverse, one cannot ascend from a lower fictional deck (if there is no pit), but one can ascend to an upper fictional one.