I wouldn't go that far. I love the film, yes (It's probably my favorite of the original cast films), but I'm not blind to its flaws. I just don't consider them big enough to ruin the film for me. YMMV.I get it, you loved TUC and whatever was there was gold to you, but I have no nostalgia for it and I'm telling you what it looked like to me.
I've never heard this before. What's your source on that?Nimoy, at the time, was so excited about his idea - he wanted to direct it
After the disappointment of STV, I just don't see Paramount ponying up much more than they did for VI, and indeed, Meyer's film was made for about the same amount of money as Shatner's. Most sequels have diminishing returns, and it's probably only through STIV becoming a surprise breakout hit that the movie series made it as far as it did. It was smart of Paramount not to spend more than they did, as they maintained a decent profit margin that way.If Paramount gave Nimoy the time to fully develop his vision, he would've gotten a real budget and probably presented an Enterprise which would've been more in line with TFF
And why are you assuming that the Enterprise sets in a Nimoy-directed film would look like the ones in a Shatner-directed film? If anything, Nimoy probably would have brought the STV sets more in line with the Enterprise-A bridge we glimpsed at the end of IV.
Why? There are 80 years separating the two series. It'd be weird if they looked very similar to each other. The world we live in today doesn't look very much like 1938.Bringing TOS in line with TNG which it should've gone
Exactly. The production design of TUC is pretty great, and some judicious location shooting and matte paintings gave them the most bang for their buck, giving the film the epic scope it needed. Those shots of the Alaskan glaciers during the escape from Rura Penthe are gorgeous, and the locations chosen for the Starfleet briefing and the Khitomer Summit look great. We also got brand new uniforms for the Klingons (never seen before or since), some great alien makeups at Khitomer and Rura Penthe, and some cool costuming on the alien delegations. Star Trek VI spent its money much more intelligently than Generations did, where they blew their budget on the sailing ship Enterprise in the holodeck and a massive Stellar Cartography set, forcing them to reuse uniforms from DS9, recycle the explosion of the Bird of Prey from the end of the previous movie, and climax with three middle-aged men fighting on a jungle gym.The bigger picture...the money saved reusing tng sets went into the new Klingon ship sets, Klingon court room, and a ice prison.
Yeah, there's stuff in TUC where the budget restraints are apparent (Not being able to reshoot Valeris with matching uniform colors hurt the film, IMO, and I would've loved to have seen the scripted crew gathering sequence), but for the most part they were pretty clever in working inside their limitations. Yeah, when I look at the film today it's obvious that the UFP President's office is just a redressed Ten-Forward from TNG, but I had no idea when I first saw the film, and that's all that really mattered.
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