I know one of the designers of "Stella" there.I assume you mean aside from the one hooked to my TV right now...![]()

I know one of the designers of "Stella" there.I assume you mean aside from the one hooked to my TV right now...![]()
What doesn't look good are the ships. I apologize to the Okuda's (again!) for saying this, but the "ships in space scenes" too often look, well, 'cartooney' to me, regardless if they are viewed in standard or high definition.
The worst remastering of all? "The Doomsday Machine," with the grossly over-damaged Constellation and the very disappointing planet killer.
And how do you fit these new shots in? Cut more of the original episode away to make room for them?
Define "available". If the only version broadcast or streamed are the ones with the new effects it basically makes the originals unavailable to the vast majority of the audience who don't purchase DVD and BluRay sets and who probably have no idea different versions exist.So for me it was a bit of a mixed bag. At least they had the sense to keep the original versions available.
Define "available".
You made my point for me.
In essence, they effectively have replaced the originals entirely in most places unless someone has the knowledge to go looking for the originals.
I was quite impressed with TNG-R because it looks like TNG under the best conditions of the time rather than something obviously changed up decades after the fact.I look at the work done for the TNG Blu-Rays (granted, they were working with some existing elements and not starting from scratch).... and the final words spoken in TOS come to mind:
"If only.... if only."
I think we'd all agree that CBS didn't allocate enough time and money for the CGI fx they added to each episode. But I think some episodes really did come out better, along with some that got worse.
Better:
- "All Our Yesterdays."
I really like the new nova (that sounds redundant but it isn't).
- "Tomorrow is Yesterday."
Although I always loved the shot in the original, in Act I, when Captain Christopher sees the Enterprise from below, the remaster is good there, and in Act IV the new effects fill in the whole visual narrative of sling-shotting around the sun that was missing from the original.
Worse:
- "Elaan of Troyius."
The original Klingon ship was more convincing. Also, I don't think the new Klingon ship scenes were composed very artfully, especially considering how much freedom of movement they had compared to the 1960s fx house.
- "Who Mourns for Adonais?"
The original big green force field hand in space looked more like the real thing.
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