I would've liked to see Phase II--going by the "Making of" book that I have they could've given it a damn good go.
I'd liked to have seen more development of Decker (especially since he'd be the young buck onboard, which Kirk wouldn't like) and Ilia. Spock was never my favourite character, so having Xon step is wouldn't be a bad thing in my eyes.
I've read a number of the Phase II scripts and Xon reads as a perfectly likable character and very not-Spock.
The character concept was perfectly likeable -- an inverse of Spock, the "logical" mind trying to understand and assimilate to humanity rather than trying to suppress humanity -- but especially in the presence of the rest of the original cast, comparisons to Spock and the glaring absence of Nimoy probably would have cast a shadow. Besides, the idea was likely much better served in its TNG form -- I wonder if this happened before or after somebody noticed the possibilities of a Pinocchio analogy -- by dropping the Vulcan heritage and making him an android.
Personally, I am glad things played out the way they did with the TOS movies.
I think the overall feel of a Star trek Phase II might have felt like a blending of TMP, Season 1 of TNG and with the cheese of the mid-late 1970s Sci Fi TV shows like Space 1999 and Buck Rogers.
But as bad as TNG's first seasons FX seem now, the FX quality of a Star Trek Phase II circa 1978 would have been magnitudes worse. People may have accepted Decker as first officer, but I don't they would have accepted Xon. Most of all, I remember clearly the backlash the Enterprise D got when it debuted. Had Phase II rolled out with the McQuarrie Enterprise, I think it would have been even more of a backlash.
In the end, I think a Phase II would have flopped because I don't think the world was ready yet for another Trek Series at that time. It was ready for TMP, however, but what helped it the most was the FX, and most importantly, it had Spock.
Definitely agree with the special effects argument.
Also, the popular sci-fi at the time was kinda campy (like Buck Rogers and much of BSG), so Trek would have sunk to those levels, and not have been as good as the previous series.
Also -- would they have been able to make those Trek Happy Meals? Those things may have held some seeds for future Trek popularity. They didn't base Happy Meals on TV shows back then, did they?
That's as dubious a conclusion as insisting the original Trek would be silly and campy because of Lost in Space and Batman.Also, the popular sci-fi at the time was kinda campy (like Buck Rogers and much of BSG), so Trek would have sunk to those levels, and not have been as good as the previous series.
Happy Meals originated with ST:TMP.Also -- would they have been able to make those Trek Happy Meals? Those things may have held some seeds for future Trek popularity. They didn't base Happy Meals on TV shows back then, did they?
I'm not saying it would be exactly the same...but certainly for TOS the color/production schemes were similar to those two shows (the colors in costumers of Batman and the "outdoor" scenes of Lost in Space.)That's as dubious a conclusion as insisting the original Trek would be silly and campy because of Lost in Space and Batman.Also, the popular sci-fi at the time was kinda campy (like Buck Rogers and much of BSG), so Trek would have sunk to those levels, and not have been as good as the previous series.
Happy Meals originated with ST:TMP.[/QUOTE]Also -- would they have been able to make those Trek Happy Meals? Those things may have held some seeds for future Trek popularity. They didn't base Happy Meals on TV shows back then, did they?
Also, the popular sci-fi at the time was kinda campy (like Buck Rogers and much of BSG), so Trek would have sunk to those levels, and not have been as good as the previous series.
I'm not saying it would be exactly the same...
^^^Can you edit your post so your reply doesn't appear to be what I wrote?
Also, the popular sci-fi at the time was kinda campy (like Buck Rogers and much of BSG), so Trek would have sunk to those levels, and not have been as good as the previous series.
I'm not saying it would be exactly the same...
You were absolutely definitive in your original statement. WOULD HAVE isn't the same as MIGHT HAVE.
^^^Can you edit your post so your reply doesn't appear to be what I wrote?
Also, the popular sci-fi at the time was kinda campy (like Buck Rogers and much of BSG), so Trek would have sunk to those levels, and not have been as good as the previous series.
I'm not saying it would be exactly the same...
You were absolutely definitive in your original statement. WOULD HAVE isn't the same as MIGHT HAVE.
Sorry about that -- edited it!
Buck Rogers and BSG had SOME level of seriousness to it, but not like TNG, but pretty close to TOS. But if Phase II remained at that level, i think it would have been hard for Trek to acheive the success that the movies provided. The timing just wasn't right for a successful series (at least one that went 7 seasons, 3 times in a row)
I agree with the rest of the thread's consensus that replacing Spock with Xon would have eventually killed the series (and most any chance for a spinoff or movie for the next several decades.)
But one thing I think they did *right* was Ilia. Persis Khambatta was IMO a much better actress than Marina Sirtis, and could pull off the "exotic alien" type in a much better way. That and, I'm not sure if TNG's writers ever had a good idea what a "ship's counselor" was supposed to do. After seven years, Troi ended up seeming to me pretty much like "Female Frazier in Space." Ilia as Navigator seemed to fit in much better as a starship officer.
I wonder what would have happened if they'd kept Deltan hypersexuality as a central character trait. It was presented as an important aspect of Ilia's character -- but pretty much dropped when she was retooled as Troi.
Basically I see a lot of assumptions here presented as probability with so little fact.
From the outside looking in Phase II looked a bit sloppy. We probably would have gotten used to the Phase II refit design, but I don't think it looks as nice as the TMP refit. The TOS era style uniforms might still have worked, but a lot depends on what the final sets would have looked like.
I wonder what would have happened if they'd kept Deltan hypersexuality as a central character trait. It was presented as an important aspect of Ilia's character -- but pretty much dropped when she was retooled as Troi.
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