Why? Kind of defeats the purpose of showing differing cultures and species if you're just going to dress them up in what humans consider appropriate.
It's difficult to fathom how this thing could have been accidental. Was it a decision approved, and snickered at, by the director and others involved?
I say there's no chance it was deliberate. My theory is that the prop maker used some primitive foam-spraying technique that didn't give him much control over the finished product. The faux stalactite ended up looking familiar entirely by accident.
I just can't explain why they went ahead and used it. It was awkward to hold and obviously had no heft, so it wasn't menacing.
I would have had Kirk glance around and pick up a crowbar. You can find them in most caves.
I always loved the spinning Lazy Susan idea for making an android
Could have put him in just a loin cloth, I think Ted could have made it work.I just wished William Ware Theiss designed something for Ted that did not resemble my grandmother's peach colored housecoat.
That would be an interesting thing to know. From a contemporary Trek standpoint I could envision a device that could scan Kirk and replicate a duplicate. And from there copying and downloading the mind.Hmm, what IS the story behind the turntable replicator?
What prompted the production to opt for this rather than, oh, say, a pair of transparent tubes or upright slabs and using a lapse dissolve, maybe enhanced with a matted optical effect, of the "Play-Doh" figure turning into Kirk? Who actually suggested it?
If nothing else, it was certainly distinctive!
Sincerely,
Bill
I'd give people of the time a little more credit. I could easily see a similar idea being used on The Twilight Zone (if indeed it wasn't)....This is not really a simplistic "robots are evil" story. There are actually some very advanced ideas presented in this story, ideas way beyond what the average viewer of the time could consider even remotely plausible.
....
The evil is not in what Corby can do---it actually could have positive applications---the evil is in how he plans to start doing it. But imagine if this option were available for someone like Christopher Pike who is otherwise doomed to a life entombed in a immobile shell---would he take the option?
Now that has me wanting to see Sherry Jackson strapped in the device...same dress code as Kirk, of course....
Could have put him in just a loin cloth, I think Ted could have made it work.![]()
Way before my time, but in the mid 1960's early fax machines would have one sheet of paper on a cylinder, it was placed in the fax machine and the cylinder would spin at high speed in front of the scanner for half a minute.Hmm, what IS the story behind the turntable replicator?
Possible but unlikely, I should think. A cylinder and a turntable are quite different. Maybe the turntable was used because it was relatively easy to build and looked both technological and magical.Way before my time, but in the mid 1960's early fax machines would have one sheet of paper on a cylinder, it was placed in the fax machine and the cylinder would spin at high speed in front of the scanner for half a minute.
(THIS is how people did business?)
That might have been the inspiration for the device we see.
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^ Artificial gravity and a inertial damping field? From Kirk's perspective the room was spinning, he was stationary.
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And some really big knobs.So, nevermind Dr. Soong's groundbreaking work on the positronic brain, all he needed to build Data was a paper-mache mannequin and a giant record player..
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