As we know the station to the ‘left’ of Spock’s science station was removable and was in fact, the most common section removed to allow the camera to shoot into the bridge set.
What happened quite often is that the “side” of Spock’s station was visible on camera thus destroying the illusion that the bridge was a solid thing. In fact, this happened so often that they painted the side of Spock’s station to match the regular visible portions. Not only that but several times the actor at the science station let his left hand grip the side of the remaining set and therefore was gripping an “edge” that did not exist.
This makes no sense in a TV format where the illusion is that the camera is catching events as a unnoticed observer.
It would be as if in “All In The Family” the camera was pulled back far enough to reveal the fact that the wall of the house was missing and you could actually SEE that it had been removed and saw where the wall had been “cut” to allow the camera in.
Was this fairly common back then on TV where a wall was removed for filming and the audience could actually see the sides of the removed section?
Isn’t the camera supposed to be a fly on the wall and NOT a fly with X-ray ‘cut-away vision” seeing things that do not exist for the subjects of the story.
Spock’s station DOES NOT have a “side”--it connects to the next station---so the camera and the audience are seeing something that does not exist.
Any thoughts? And I wonder if I’m the only person who this ever bothered! LOL.
What happened quite often is that the “side” of Spock’s station was visible on camera thus destroying the illusion that the bridge was a solid thing. In fact, this happened so often that they painted the side of Spock’s station to match the regular visible portions. Not only that but several times the actor at the science station let his left hand grip the side of the remaining set and therefore was gripping an “edge” that did not exist.
This makes no sense in a TV format where the illusion is that the camera is catching events as a unnoticed observer.
It would be as if in “All In The Family” the camera was pulled back far enough to reveal the fact that the wall of the house was missing and you could actually SEE that it had been removed and saw where the wall had been “cut” to allow the camera in.
Was this fairly common back then on TV where a wall was removed for filming and the audience could actually see the sides of the removed section?
Isn’t the camera supposed to be a fly on the wall and NOT a fly with X-ray ‘cut-away vision” seeing things that do not exist for the subjects of the story.
Spock’s station DOES NOT have a “side”--it connects to the next station---so the camera and the audience are seeing something that does not exist.
Any thoughts? And I wonder if I’m the only person who this ever bothered! LOL.