Has Fred Freiberger been misblamed for Season 3 over the years?

Discussion in 'Star Trek - The Original & Animated Series' started by Lance, Dec 9, 2013.

  1. SpHeRe31459

    SpHeRe31459 Captain Captain

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    Indeed. It's incredibly hard to think of films like Casablanca or Citizen Cane as possibly looking good in color. In the Sci-Fi genre, the fantastic moody cinematography of The Outer Limits, and many Twilight Zone episodes are amazing, and if done in color, would have likely been robbed of much of those B&W cinematography techniques that are so impactful.

    Yep the new "hey we can play with the color timing as much as we like in digital", so then they make everything steely blue or as you mentioned a pale brown, etc. is ridiculously out of control.

    Yep I feel the same way. If something is good, it's good. I can place it in its' context and take for what it is, and when it was made, etc.
     
  2. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    Yeah... It made sense in The Matrix, where the subtle sickly-green tinge to the virtual world was a hint to its unreality, but then countless other films and shows started using the same sickly-green tinge to everything for no good reason.

    One place where it did kind of work was last season's Awake on NBC, about a man jumping back and forth between two different realities and not knowing which one was real. They color-coded the realities with a subtle red tinge to one and a subtle green tinge to the other, as well as using those as the dominant colors in the respective worlds' set and costume designs. It was a nice, almost subliminal way to tell the worlds apart, and also helped make one of the worlds feel warmer and more inviting than the other.
     
  3. LMFAOschwarz

    LMFAOschwarz Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    Irony of ironies, too. In the 70's, the original producers envisioned a typewriter being used in the future. Now, someone sees a "MacBook" in use in 2099. What's the "improvement" in that? :wtf:
     
  4. Push The Button

    Push The Button Commodore Commodore

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    I'm enjoying the Space 1999 discussion that has broken out in this thread, as I am currently in the middle of rewatching the entire series. I have to admit that the show isn't exactly as great as I had remembered it to be, but to be fair, I was ten when it first aired here in the States.

    The 70's were a golden age of sorts for pop sci-fi, from Trek reruns, to 1999 and Battlestar Galactica, and culminating in Star Wars and Star Trek: The Motion Picture.

    As for Fred Freiberger, perhaps he shouldn't be judged so harshly. Trek was already on borrowed time before he took over, and short of NBC putting it back in a better timeslot and the production budget being increased, I don't believe that anything or anyone was going to be able to save it at that point.
     
  5. SpHeRe31459

    SpHeRe31459 Captain Captain

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    Yep, making it look like a recent model of an iMac is just as dated, it will let everyone who views it in the future place it as something from circa-2010, which is just as "bad" (worse really since it's a deliberate revision) as being able to place it in the late-70s because of the typewriter.

    I had a chance to sit down and watch that "Space:2099" video today. Oh man, where do I begin... I get the tweaks and enhancements to say the starfields and fixing the missing sound effects, etc. But oh boy, the outright retconning of the new 2099 date is poorly executed, and the attempt to change the reason why the moon was thrown out of orbit to a wormhole is also poor and just doesn't seem to have any real point.
     
  6. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    Perhaps not, but that doesn't mean it wouldn't have been nice to have a better-written final season so it could've gone out on a stronger note. Or to get the originally pitched versions of episodes like "Spock's Brain" or "The Mark of Gideon" or "The Way to Eden" that didn't have the silly aspects of the final versions.

    Although I think Roddenberry bears much of the responsibility there because of his decision to basically wash his hands of the show. I mean, I get that he had to think about his future and focus on his next project, but at least he could've made more of an effort to leave the show in good hands, like promoting Bob Justman to producer or asking John Meredyth Lucas to stay on.
     
  7. Commishsleer

    Commishsleer Commodore Commodore

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    I'm not making an accusation here but could GR maybe subconciously not wanted Star Trek to be a 'success' without him. So he put the 'wrong' people in. Or was it still his baby despite everything?
     
  8. Andrew_Kearley

    Andrew_Kearley Captain Captain

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    Yeah, I don't see what the issue is with the typewriter. It still doesn't seem out of place to me watching it today. In fact, it's easy to assume that Helena is deliberately using a piece of retro technology because she's writing up the dragon incident for her own benefit - she doesn't want to make an official computer record that might be read and reproduced.
     
  9. CorporalCaptain

    CorporalCaptain Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    This Space: 2099 is atrocious, both in conception and in execution. This sort of thing really gets my goat (is lucasization going to be a word?), especially in conjunction with bowdlerization, such as was perhaps in a sense done here, as was definitely done to Star Wars, but definitely and to a greater degree, as was done to The Martian Chronicles. I had a lot of problems with TOS-R, but this 2099 takes it too a new low, and makes TOS-R look like a textbook case for how to do everything right. Gotta love the narration in the video that has the tone which suggests that naturally this is all good.
     
  10. Botany Bay

    Botany Bay Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Interesting point. I never entirely understood why he walked away either - it was on the air after all, and if any profits were being generated, he'd split them with Paramount/Desilu (and, it is rumoured, Shatner), but perhaps Roddenberry felt that the show was a lost cause, was backbreaking work and that he had plenty of other great TV concepts he wanted to do that would surely be all hits.

    Freiberger, it is said, was Roddenberry's choice to produce Season One - Gene probably thought Freiberger was a great hire, and he finally got the guy he wanted all along.

    It is possible as well that stories about Gene Roddenberry were circulating around Hollywood by this point, and few wanted to work with him. Roddenberry may have been a gifted, visionary creative force, but from everything I've read, he is the sort of person you would run a mile from having professional dealings with (in my opinion).
     
  11. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    No, that doesn't add up. It was only "without him" because he chose to direct his attention elsewhere. His other staffers had moved on, but he was still the executive producer of the show up until it ended. If he'd chosen to, he would've still been the head writer as well. If anything, it would've been self-destructive to sabotage a show that was still officially his.


    I agree. It's easy for us to forget today, but back then, ST was just another TV show. It was only the second show Roddenberry had produced, and while he was probably proud of it, he expected it would be just one early stepping-stone in a long career. So once it was clear that ST was doomed, he felt he had to begin focusing on what came next. He didn't know that ST would end up being his only success.


    Right. He wanted to leave the show in what he believed were capable hands. But with nearly everyone else moving on and Roddenberry stepping back, there was just too little creator continuity, too little guidance for the new staff in how to handle the show.


    Maybe, but I think that was more the case in the TNG years than at this time. He was able to get TOS collaborators to work with him again on other projects: Fontana on TAS and TNG, Justman on Planet Earth and TNG, Coon on The Questor Tapes. So the Roddenberry of the '60s must not have burned his bridges as thoroughly as he did later in his career.
     
  12. trevanian

    trevanian Rear Admiral

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    On that INSIDE STAR TREK LP from the mid 70s, when being interviewed on stage by Shatner, GR says that if he had it to do over again, he'd've line produced season 3 even after being given the death time slot.

    That could just be self-serving claptrap, especially given that by 1975, TREK had turned into the syndication monster nobody anticipated and was already being evaluated and reevaluated for big-screen revival, but I don't suppose you can rule out the idea that he was sincere.

    Maybe he really thought Freiberger could mainstream the show to some degree (though I still can't see why Lucas wouldn't have been a better candidate, since he already proved he could do the same - maybe DC Fontana has some knowledge about the Lucas situation she hasn't yet chosen to share? I mean, it was nearly 20 years on the whole bit where she admitted to having rewritten CITY, and she had actually gone so far as to write a letter to CFQ in the 80s specifically refuting the very idea) and then GR could just chime in occasionally to keep it from being perverted into something he didn't want.
     
  13. Maurice

    Maurice Snagglepussed Admiral

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    I suspect the reality was several things.

    1. It's actually very common for series creators to step back from their shows after a season or two because you never know how long a series will run (even hits are cancelled sometimes) and you always want to have something in the queue.
    2. You get a paid for every episode of each show just because you're the creator, even if you've left the show, so you're still making money on it even if you move on. The more shows you have on the air, the more dough you get.
    3. Gene claimed he told NBC he would come back and line produce the show in the 3rd season based on the timeslot he was promised, but when the show got bumped to Friday at 10 (because of Laugh-In) he felt that in order to have any credibility with the network in future bargaining he had to stick by his guns and step back, since his coming back to line produce was contingent on the timeslot. (I can't speak to how true this is.)
    4. The 10pm timeslot really was a death sentence for a show whose audience was that which Star Trek's was, so Gene may well have thought he'd better focus all his attentions on selling something new.
     
  14. plynch

    plynch Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    After reading the sample online of the These Are the Voyages book, I have a different feel for GR. He had written for many series. He had many ideas. You get one going, burn out (S1), hire good lieutenants and move on to your next idea/creation. We view him now as TREKCREATOR Roddenberry, but at the time, he was Gene R, writer-producer in '60s/70s TV.

    Sometimes I've finished writing a piece of music or song and sort of don't care if it gets performed. It was a puzzle, a challenge, now it's complete, move on. An imperfect analogy, but GR maybe was a more restless creative spirit than we Trek-centrics conceive.

    2. Someone asked what I teach, wherein I would use BW movies. I am a HS school instructor in beautiful Escanaba, MI, in the upper peninsula, on the northern shore of Lake Michigan. I currently teach Civics, Econ, and Psych. Just today, the day before break, I had to leave my psych kids in suspense of the Bad Seed. It gets weirder and weirder, and they have to wait until January to find out what happens. They were ready to rebel when I hit pause today. Victory. I do have to prep them it is a filmed play, so WAY talkier than moder movies. So I agree with someone above who thought BW is not the prob, but it is associated with a style of movie so different from the noise/action (dare I say Abrams/Jackson??) style that is the now.
     
  15. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    ST was only the second series he'd created and produced. I doubt any producer wants to peak that early in their career. He probably hoped to move on to a fuller career that would include a number of different successful series. He certainly had a bunch of SF ideas and got several of them to pilot stage, and almost to series stage with Questor, though it fell through. Heck, he developed the initial idea for Assignment: Earth in 1966, during ST's first season. He wanted to have more than one show on the air at the same time, or at least to have something to fall back on if ST got cancelled.

    I wonder if Roddenberry would've gotten more shows on the air if he had been easier to work with. How much did he shoot himself in the foot, career-wise, with his behavior and attitude?
     
  16. Botany Bay

    Botany Bay Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    I suspect, massively. And it's a real shame. What might have been?

    If the US entertainment business is anything like the one where I live, people are forever meeting up at awards nights etc, and, generally the whole thing is usually a gossip fest about what is going on behind the scenes at other companies.

    The goings on at Desilu would have been spread far and wide.

    Anyway, back to Freiberger, you do have to feel for the guy taking all the heat for season 3 over the years. We will never know, but I suspect a Roddenberry produced season three without the likes of Fontana, Coon, Black, Solow, Justman etc around him would not have been any better than what was served up by Freiberger/Singer - who knows, it could have been worse.
     
  17. Commishsleer

    Commishsleer Commodore Commodore

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    Interesting

    But IMO Season 3 wasn't all that bad.

    It had some really good episodes that defined aspects in the Star Trek universe. It also had a few duds.
     
    Last edited: Dec 21, 2013
  18. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    Who knows? I'm on the fence about whether Assignment: Earth would've made a good series; the idea had potential, but the actual episode didn't necessarily sell it too well. I've read the script for the original, non-Trek-related '66 pilot, and it was pretty awful. I get the impression it was meant more as a sitcom, sort of like My Favorite Martian but with more spy-vs.-spy, but it wasn't at all funny. The proposal Art Wallace and Roddenberry did for the Trek-spinoff series sounded a lot more interesting. It stressed that the crises would come from human flaws and foibles rather than aliens and fanciful phenomena (which was largely to contrast it with the competition, The Invaders). That could've made it a nice, smart drama, and one with diverse story possibilities, or it could've proved limiting.

    There was also The Questor Tapes, which was basically a rehash of the A:E premise (cool, intelligent being uses alien tech to shepherd Earth away from self-destruction), but I think it would've been a stronger series, since Robert Foxworth and Mike Farrell had a great chemistry, a lot like Kirk and Spock. I never felt Robert Lansing and Teri Garr had the same kind of rapport. (Of course, if A:E had gone to series, there could've been a cast change -- either a new sidekick or a recast Roberta, without explanation in either case, which was common back then.) Although a Questor series would've been stronger if the movie hadn't already resolved his quest, if there'd been some ongoing mystery about his origins and nature.

    Then there's Genesis II/Planet Earth. That had potential, and was designed to be a "Hundred Worlds" series like Trek, visiting a different exotic culture every week, just on post-apocalyptic Earth instead of space. Actually this idea was executed elsewhere, in the Logan's Run series and Ark II on Saturday mornings, with limited success. So G2/PE might not have lasted much longer than those. G2 definitely wasn't viable in that form; Alex Cord wasn't an appealing enough lead, the PAX culture was too sterile and unsympathetic, and the look was rather unappealing. The retooled, mostly recast Planet Earth version worked much better, though, and could've spawned a viable series -- although it would've been marred in retrospect by some rather ugly Native American stereotyping where Ted Cassidy's character was concerned.

    The other Roddenberry pilot that got produced in his lifetime was the supernatural-themed Spectre, which I've never seen, so I can't speculate on how it would've worked as a series. But in David Gerrold's The World of Star Trek, it was mentioned that he was working on an idea called The Tribunes, involving near-future police officers using advanced technology and methods. I've always wondered what that might have been like.

    Then there was Battleground: Earth, the pilot that was posthumously made into Earth: Final Conflict. I gather the aliens were more unambiguously villainous in the original, meaning it would've been more like V (which was why it was changed).
     
  19. Warped9

    Warped9 Admiral Admiral

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    Agreed.
     
  20. Botany Bay

    Botany Bay Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Seconded.

    The only ones in season 3 I have to force myself to sit through are "And The Children...", "Let that be..." and "Plato's Stepchildren".

    For Season 2 I struggle with "I, Mudd", "Omega Glory", and "A Private Little War".

    In season 1, it's "Mudd's Women", "The Alternative Factor", and "Operation : Annihilate!".

    So Season 3 (in my opinion) has no more horrible episodes that the others. I think what drags it down is that the mediocre episodes number far more - there was just way too much time spent aboard the ship, talking, and the ship was just far too empty - we needed to be meeting new characters in that third season, but for budgetary reasons it seemed like the 430-man Enterprise was run by our seven main characters and half a dozen redshirts.

    To give you an idea of how frustrating it must have been trying to make Star Trek's scripts come alive on a budget of ~$200,000 per episode, this is a quote from the late, great Bob Justman I found in the new TOS book by Cushman (2013) :

    "Sometimes I get the feeling the only way we could achieve a STAR TREK segment on budget would be to have 60 minutes of Mr. Spock playing kazoo solo as Captain Kirk holds him in his arms while standing in a telephone booth."

    :lol:

    The man was a genius. And consider he made that comment in 1967, before a couple of rounds of further budget cuts and a couple of contactually binding salary increases for the leads. Freiberger really was up against it.