I have a complete collection of the 12 small figures.^ I don't think the concept of "upscale" movie tie-in merchandise even existed at the time.
I think the TMP toys must have bombed. I only ever remember seeing them in the tiny toy section of a JC Penny's, a store where no kid went of their own free will. The action figure package cards had pictures of aliens on them that, as far as I knew, hadn't even appeared in the movie, which I thought was odd. Later I noticed them, far in the background.
^ I don't think the concept of "upscale" movie tie-in merchandise even existed at the time.
I think the TMP toys must have bombed. I only ever remember seeing them in the tiny toy section of a JC Penny's, a store where no kid went of their own free will. The action figure package cards had pictures of aliens on them that, as far as I knew, hadn't even appeared in the movie, which I thought was odd. Later I noticed them, far in the background.
The idea would not be so much to promote the movie, or STAR TREK, in general, per se, but more to equate to owning some of the art of the movie, itself. Whether it was framed photos of any of the other ships called ENTERPRISE, from the Rec Room (photography), or the Ilia Probe's robe (fashion), or a reproduction of the sensor-necklace worn by Persis Khambatta, as the probe (jewelry) ... it's all art.How would that in the least way be considered a "tie in?"Something where, STAR TREK is not stamped all over something fashioned in the shape of Captain Kirk. Something you could present to someone and have them not even guess it was from a movie, at all. Much less TMP.
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... AGREED!!!What you are thinking of a "quality" merchandise tie-ins are targeted at MY generation - the kids that went to see Star Wars and Star Trek and are grown up now with disposable income. Yes, Spock's Kolinar robe and Ilia's headband COULD have been produced in 1979/80, but nobody thought to do such things. I don't think the "quality" merchandise existed for ANY movie in that time period.
My question has been answered, then, in full:
There is no upscale merchandise associated with STAR TREK: The Motion Picture - indeed, there never was. More's the pity ...
I think the large Spock Bust liquor decanter would count as high-end. They were expensive, esp. when filled with the alcohol (many were exported empty).
You're probably overanalyzing it. Most of what you're referring to was designed for the "wing walk" sequence when they step out onto the hull before strolling to V'ger. It's possible that they considered putting everyone in spacesuits for this at some point, or a production artist just drew it this way. It's also possible the airlock staging area set was designed to service both the top personnel hatch and the airlock below, even if it doesn't make sense with the exterior of the miniature.Here is a question that's been growing on me: What came first, the airlock at the Enterprise's saucer hull bottom or the personnel lift hatch to the top side of the saucer?IMHO, all this could suggest that the airlock set was actually built for a location in the upper saucer (and as a possible prelude to the lift scene near the end of the film) but finally only featured as a staging area at the bottom side of the saucer.
- On Maab's excellent website there is a production painting showing a Kirk in a spacesuit next to what appears to be a saucer running light bulb for scale reference. This suggests that originally a scene was planned for EVA activity on the top side of the saucer, IMHO.
- The airlock staging area's control console features interesting indicators, especially "Elev[ator] Travel" "up" and "down". Hardly the kind of controls I would have expected near the ventral airlock / docking port but most definitely for the personnel lift hatch seen near the end of the film
- In the deleted airlock scene you can see there's some kind of stand there. Curiously, Shane Johnson's depiction of the airlock (ventral saucer) lacks this item, but features it as a "control pedestal / handgrip" near the personnel hatch platform (page 59 "Mr. Scott's" Guide to the Enterprise). It is barely visible in this screencap but obviously it's there (I remember promotional shots showing the actors close-up while being uplifted).
Is this correct?
Bob
Forget using orange-peel alcohol ... if my toilet ever broke, I know what I would fill it with: something hot, brown and plentiful. I'm sure this was insanely overpriced, even at the time, but what a cheap-looking piece of shit. The whole thing's rediculous ... in the shape of Lenny Nimoy, no less! No wonder he wanted out of STAR TREK ...I think the large Spock Bust liquor decanter would count as high-end. They were expensive, esp. when filled with the alcohol (many were exported empty).
Dang, and I used to have one! No idea what happened to it. That's too bad...I could've sent it to 2Takes! Oh, well, it's the thought that counts...right, 2Takes?![]()
Forget using orange-peel alcohol ... if my toilet ever broke, I know what I would fill it with: something hot, brown and plentiful. I'm sure this was insanely overpriced, even at the time, but what a cheap-looking piece of shit. The whole thing's rediculous ... in the shape of Lenny Nimoy, no less! No wonder he wanted out of STAR TREK ...
I seem to recall there was a satin TMP jacket with the Enterprise on the back which was lit with LEDs.
Here's a question I've had for a while. I remember in the Read Along ST:TMP story book and record (I still have it in storage somewhere), it uses an odd image that was supposed to V'Ger starting to engulf the Enterprise (I guess?), but it's a very strange purple cloud with another texture double-exposed with it.
I don't think I've ever seen anything from the production of TMP that had any kind of effect like it. So I gather it's one of those things the authors fudged a stock photo of the Enterprise from TMP with their own idea of the cloud.
As an aside, I found a cool site that has set about archiving all kinds of Read Along books and turning them into standalone Flash executable that have story book and the audio, when you turn the page it starts the next page's audio.
http://www.readalongadventures.com/
Yeah, see that? Couldn't even be bothered to make it out of quality porcelain - had to use cheap, grainy and course slop. It's such a shame, because right-out-of-the-box, STAR TREK merchandise has always been vulgar: Tacky, touristy, souvenir-type, disposable garbage that is obscenely overpriced, to begin with. As an adult STAR TREK fan, it's very hard for me to window shop on the merchandise side of town.Aw, now you figured out why I was so willing to part with it!
It was given to me as a gift by a friends' mother. Back in my day the general wisdom was that parents didn't "get" stereo (i.e., "Why do you want a 5-band equalizer, isn't 3 enough?"). Similarly, they didn't "get" Star Trek. And your reference of orange peel reminded me of the somewhat sandy texture of this decanter. It was very difficult to dust. In fact, I've remembered since posting that I ended up just throwing it away.
If you're interested in something brown and plentiful, I turn your attention back to the cookbook! Think of it as experiencing actual, life-like symptoms of some of those Star Trek diseases we all heard about!![]()
I'm sure this was insanely overpriced, even at the time, but what a cheap-looking piece of shit. The whole thing's rediculous ... in the shape of Lenny Nimoy, no less!
STAR TREK merchandise has always been vulgar: Tacky, touristy, souvenir-type, disposable garbage that is obscenely overpriced, to begin with. As an adult STAR TREK fan, it's very hard for me to window shop on the merchandise side of town.
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