I have said this often over the years. I have threads in the Arts forum about this very thing. If TOS had had a bit more time and money with the creative minds they already had on hand it would have been amazing.Star Trek could've had better sets and more miniatures if they'd had a bit more money and time, but the episodes we have are a pretty good demonstration of what $180,000 and a week of filming could get you in the late '60s.
The usual, "Quality, time or cost? Pick two," paradigm was probably in play as well...Many of the the fx shots in TOS still hold up IMO, although some are terrible. It would be interesting to match-up the fx shots with the companies that produced the footage. I believe there were at least 3 different companies that produced the effects shots for the series. I wonder if certain fx companies produced better footage.
You know this, Scott, but may I say: on Space: 1999 they didn't just use in-camera backdrops that were really there (like the daredevil flying in "Guardian of Piri"). They would sometimes rewind the undeveloped film of an Eagle in space and shoot again on it, to add more elements to the picture. Like: film the Eagle fly-by, rewind, and film the planet right on that same negative.Now if the had gone the route Irwin Allen and Gerry Anderson had and relied on in-camera effects with models against backdrops, they would look much cleaner. But what Irwin and Gerry gained in clean images and no degradation they lost in versatility.
As I recall, there were four: the Howard A. Anderson Company, Van der Veer Photo Effects, Film Effects Of Hollywood, and the Westheimer Company.. . . It would be interesting to match-up the fx shots with the companies that produced the footage. I believe there were at least 3 different companies that produced the effects shots for the series.
Yes, those were gorgeous shots of the Flying Sub miniature, courtesy of the Lydecker brothers.. . . Having said that, Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea's flying sub banking and diving through the sky and into the water was beautiful. Even if it was used practically every damned week.
Yep, and they also made sure in the space scene there was a "path" with no stars to fly in front of, which is one of the reasons why stars were so sparce in that series sometimes. But these were usually one and done shots, they didn't take the same shot of an Eagle and print it over and over, down the generations. But really this is mostly just for 1999. Most of Anderson's shows were filled with in-camera models and they all transferred beautifully to HD.You know this, Scott, but may I say: on Space: 1999 they didn't just use in-camera backdrops that were really there (like the daredevil flying in "Guardian of Piri"). They would sometimes rewind the undeveloped film of an Eagle in space and shoot again on it, to add more elements to the picture. Like: film the Eagle fly-by, rewind, and film the planet right on that same negative.
This multi-pass technique looked damn good, and you only had to develop one negative and the shot is done, but it meant the Eagle had to stay in black space, and never pass in front of the planet. If it did, the Eagle miniature would be double-exposed and transparent.
The same multi-pass technique was used for Moonraker (1979), and I heard they made quite a few passes on the same reel to get all the Space Shuttles and combatants in there with Drax's space station.
As I recall, there were four: the Howard A. Anderson Company, Van der Veer Photo Effects, Film Effects Of Hollywood, and the Westheimer Company.
Yes, you are correct, thank you!
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