The idea of slipstream routes being comprehensible to organic minds alone was cool.
I had no idea…It's a series with little reward however the first season or two are OK to watch if you are curious. It just gets messier and messier after that. I'd also recommend Robert Hewitt Wolfe Andromeda Coda script which explained how later seasons were supposed to go.
What was the name of that episode...it was like the only one I never saw...I think I slightly prefer purple Trance's personality, but Laura Bertram is attractive no matter her color of the rainbow.
Oh, hey...I spotted Michael Shanks and Christopher Judge. Funny how both men made an appearance on Andromeda when Stargate SG-1 was at its peak.
When was Trance blue? I remember her being purple, and then turning gold, but I don't remember her ever being blue.I had no idea…
I like Trance in blue thank you
What was the name of that episode...it was like the only one I never saw...
When was Trance blue? I remember her being purple, and then turning gold, but I don't remember her ever being blue.
When was Trance blue? I remember her being purple, and then turning gold, but I don't remember her ever being blue.
One thing I never understood after Andromeda got a full crew again was the lack of uniforms. It made sense early on when it was just seven of them, and I could even see Dylan forgoing one after a while, but once that crew turned into a couple hundred or thousand, or ten depending on the episode, you'd think they'd issue new uniforms for the crew. You could even have Harper and Beka complaining about it here and there.
I just realized that Star Trek Discovery just did their Andromeda story line last season. I wonder which one was closer to Gene Roddenberry's original idea. (Now I will go run and hide.)
I just realized that Star Trek Discovery just did their Andromeda story line last season. I wonder which one was closer to Gene Roddenberry's original idea. (Now I will go run and hide.)
You can see Roddenberry's original idea in the TV movies Genesis II and Planet Earth. They were about a scientist named Dylan Hunt who was put in cryogenic suspension in the 20th century and woke up in a post-apocalyptic 22nd century, where he worked with an organization called PAX to try to rebuild civilization.
That was where the Rodenberry's name in the credits came from? I had always assumed the premise and the characters and all of that came from him. It seems like kind of a stretch to call it Gene Rodenberry's Andromeda and to give him a creator credit, when so little of what was on screen came from him.You can see Roddenberry's original idea in the TV movies Genesis II and Planet Earth. They were about a scientist named Dylan Hunt who was put in cryogenic suspension in the 20th century and woke up in a post-apocalyptic 22nd century, where he worked with an organization called PAX to try to rebuild civilization. It would've been pretty close to the '70s Logan's Run TV series or Filmation's Ark 2 on Saturday mornings, traveling around and encountering the various weird enclave civilizations that had cropped up in isolation. (For some reason, TV execs really wanted to make a "wandering the post-apocalypse" series work in the late '70s, also trying it with Planet of the Apes and with the Strange New World pilot, a third stab at Roddenberry's concept without Roddenberry's participation.) The concept was heavily reworked for Andromeda because Kevin Sorbo wanted to do a space show, and Robert Hewitt Wolfe merged it with a lot of his own ideas from an unused post-apocalyptic Star Trek premise.
So the answer is that neither one was particularly close to the original, since the original wasn't a space show. In one way, Andromeda was a little closer, since in it, the fall of civilization was more complete.
That was where the Rodenberry's name in the credits came from? I had always assumed the premise and the characters and all of that came from him. It seems like kind of a stretch to call it Gene Rodenberry's Andromeda and to give him a creator credit, when so little of what was on screen came from him.
What about Earth: Final Conflict? How much of that came from Rodenberry?
That was where the Rodenberry's name in the credits came from? I had always assumed the premise and the characters and all of that came from him. It seems like kind of a stretch to call it Gene Rodenberry's Andromeda and to give him a creator credit, when so little of what was on screen came from him.
What about Earth: Final Conflict? How much of that came from Rodenberry?
Yup. Okie was the Robert Wolfe of E:FC, except unlike Robert he actually had a Roddenberry pilot script and other materials to work with.
Unfortunately, despite that last sentence, this was the only post Okie made on the BBS, so we didn't get any further answers. I've always wondered what the original plan was, but only a few details have ever emerged. It would've been profoundly different from the dumbed-down Jaridian stuff we finally got.Hi guys, it's Rick Okie, and yes, I was involved in creating the first half of the first season of EFC, though other forces won out after that. I would agree that the series took off in different directions than were originally intended; I would agree that Tribune's preferences had much to do with the change; I am not surprised that Robert Wolfe experienced a similar left-turn on Andromeda.
As originally conceived, the creators were going for some ground-breaking elements in the creation of Da'an and the Taelons -- based though they were on the original Roddenberry creation. We tried to challenge everything -- worldview, gender, goals and missions - if we could make it alien, we would make it ALIEN.
There was one unforgettable conversation in the Tribune offices where we fought for the concept of Da'an's gender/sexuality as utterly ambiguous and capable of mutation depending on the situation. Who knows how many genders the Taelons have? Five? Six? We were told that if there were to be any sexual undertones to the Da'an-Boone relationship, then Da'an was female. Period.
Enigma and mystery were the original goals...and the earliest casualties. I'll try to dredge up more painful memories for future posts.
That was my least favorite part. Mostly, Andromeda was a hard-SF series
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