The final version of that shot in the 2022 DE also looks... weird, too. It looks far too much like CG, and the effects of the dissipating cloud fade away too fast. Really clashes with their original objective of trying to look like 1979 effects.Which is weird because there are storyboards depicting it in a more frightening fashion, a big silhouette eclipsing the sun, and so forth. The DE approach is almost literally the least imaginative way to show it.
Pluto's orbit is 40 AU in diameter, so twice as big as that. That's very insane. 2AU is past the orbit of Mars into the asteroid belt.Yeah. In the theatrical cut they mention the Vger cloud as being 81 AU in diameter—thats insane. Subsequently in later director’s cuts they scale that back to 2 AU—still crazy big.
The final version of that shot in the 2022 DE also looks... weird, too. It looks far too much like CG, and the effects of the dissipating cloud fade away too fast. Really clashes with their original objective of trying to look like 1979 effects.
Pluto's averaged orbit is just under 40 AU in radius, not diameter.Pluto's orbit is 40 AU in diameter, so twice as big as that. That's very insane. 2AU is past the orbit of Mars into the asteroid belt.
Ah, thank you. I looked up a chart of planet AU from the Sun, didn't phrase it right.Pluto's averaged orbit is just under 40 AU in radius, not diameter.
NCC-1701 was as much a star of the show as any of the actors. I got exactly why Trumbull shot it that way.TMP had, in effect, two directors: Robert Wise and Doug Trumbull.
Wise let Trumbull direct the entire sequence of the travel pod approaching the Enterprise, and Trumbull also directed Spock's journey into V'Ger and subsequent mind meld. In addition, due to the pressures of time, Wise basically just inserted Trumbull's effects sequences into the film unedited, so Trumbull's approach and vision had a very significant effect on the final film.
The pace of the film, which may here decry as "slowing down the story," was a very deliberate approach by Trumbull. To use an overly cliched phrase, it is a feature, not a bug. It is one of the reasons I adore TMP. And the attempts to "correct" it in the DE only make the film worse, IMHO. Not every film has to move fast. TMP is designed to project a sense of awe and wonder and it does so marvelously.
"This sequence was all about arriving at the Enterprise and cruising around it and doing the series of reveal shots. As you approach, you have to look through this drydock to the Enterprise which is docked inside of it so you never quite get to see it. ... The shuttle comes around and it turns and it faces the Enterprise from the front. That's the big reveal shot. And that was where Goldsmith cut lose with the most beautiful music cue ever. And you get to see the Enterprise in its full glory."
"I wanted it to be this beautiful, epic, spectacular sequence that had no dialog, no story, no plot. Everything stops. And let the audience just love the Enterprise. I wanted everybody to buy into the beauty of space and the beauty of their mission and the beauty of the Enterprise itself. And just have everybody get out of the way and let that happen, which was something I'd really learned with Kubrick on 2001 -- stop talking for a while and just let it all flow."
-- Doug Trumbull
So you missed the entire point of my post, then? It wasn't raw footage at all. It was directed and edited by Trumbull with Wise's permission. The sequences were as designed and were the pace they were deliberately.Raw footage is to be edited.
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