• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Hey, I never noticed that before....

Warped9

Admiral
Admiral
Based on this remark (in another thread):
Watching "The Cage" and I never realized there is a small trickle of water coming off of the rocks just below the Talosian elevator on the planet surface.

And this remark:
One day I might get the BluRays just so I can see if there's something in the live-action footage I might have missed all these years.

Hey, wait a minute... That could make an interesting thread. :)

Here we are.

For those of you who have TOS on BluRay can you share something you saw onscreen that somehow you never noticed before in all your previous viewings over the years?
 
Fingerprints, dirt, brush strokes, chipped paint, sloppy carpentry, scuff marks, zippers on uniforms...
Not at all surprising as I started to notice some of this in the previous DVD remastering. That's where I also started to discern the infamous and hotly debated gridlines penciled onto the saucer hull. It was with the DVDs I also finally saw the texturing and detail of many of the costumes.

The detail on the rank stripes in "The Cage" and "Where No Man...".
That's a detail I had no idea about, but it makes sense since plain wide silver (or gold) striping seems rather blah.
 
The pilot communicators' details really pop on blu ray. No cheap construction with those props. Something else: the bridge (from "The Cage") really shows off the effort and money put into that episode. It's a slick piece of work that was really trying to outclass the expensive sci-fi movies from the previous decade.
 
The pilot communicators' details really pop on blu ray. No cheap construction with those props. Something else: the bridge (from "The Cage") really shows off the effort and money put into that episode. It's a slick piece of work that was really trying to outclass the expensive sci-fi movies from the previous decade.
Yea, a pity they couldn't put that level of effort into the TOS era bridge on a regular basis, but given the budget and time contstraints it's not surprising.
 
I don't know if this counts as I only noticed it from the dvd, I don't have bluray, but the "badges" that Dr. Severin and his followers are all wearing are an egg with an infinity symbol on them. A really nice touch on an episode that needs more to it. Before on my video tapes I just noticed it was a kind of oblong but no details.
 
I don't know if this counts as I only noticed it from the dvd, I don't have bluray...
Perhaps I should have started the thread differently to include viewing on DVD. The release on DVD did show us things easily missed or obscured before on VHS and in televised reruns on CRT televisions. Remastering yet again for Blu-Ray brings with it even greater resolution and revealing of unseen and easily missed details.
 
There is also a nice coffee stain down the side of the M-5 control box on the side of Kirk's chair. Maybe that's why M-5 went crazy; coffee in the circuits...:rommie:
Considering how we saw the characters drinking beverages while on duty (such as Kirk and company on the Bridge) suggests it was a shipwide habit. So seeing such things as occasional stains on tabletops and equipment probably wouldn't be that unusual aboard a "real" ship. Similarly with scuff marks on the floor.

This is one of those things I had in the back of my mind when pondering how unlikely it would be to fool Kirk into believing he was on a deserted Enterprise in "The Mark Of Gideon." A real ship would likely have all sorts of signs of normal wear and distinctive marks that the crew would be aware of even if they didn't really pay attention to it on a daily basis. That and the personal effects and distinctive decor in crew cabins and crew recreation areas. Unless Kirk was drugged or in a dream like state that's something he should have noticed right off.

Even if the Gideonites somehow managed to get detailed interior blueprints to a Constitution-class starship there is no way in hell they could duplicate a specific ship down to the finest detail to fool someone intimately familiar with that vessel.
 
Considering how we saw the characters drinking beverages while on duty (such as Kirk and company on the Bridge) suggests it was a shipwide habit. So seeing such things as occasional stains on tabletops and equipment probably wouldn't be that unusual aboard a "real" ship. Similarly with scuff marks on the floor.

But then there are the odd one's: there is what looks like a stain from greasy food above the communications station in "The Cage".

This is one of those things I had in the back of my mind when pondering how unlikely it would be to fool Kirk into believing he was on a deserted Enterprise in "The Mark Of Gideon." A real ship would likely have all sorts of signs of normal wear and distinctive marks that the crew would be aware of even if they didn't really pay attention to it on a daily basis. That and the personal effects and distinctive decor in crew cabins and crew recreation areas. Unless Kirk was drugged or in a dream like state that's something he should have noticed right off.

Even if the Gideonites somehow managed to get detailed interior blueprints to a Constitution-class starship there is no way in hell they could duplicate a specific ship down to the finest detail to fool someone intimately familiar with that vessel.

Obviously, they had someone on the inside. Simply no other way to pull off what they did.
 
Considering how we saw the characters drinking beverages while on duty (such as Kirk and company on the Bridge) suggests it was a shipwide habit. So seeing such things as occasional stains on tabletops and equipment probably wouldn't be that unusual aboard a "real" ship. Similarly with scuff marks on the floor.

But then there are the odd one's: there is what looks like a stain from greasy food above the communications station in "The Cage".

This is one of those things I had in the back of my mind when pondering how unlikely it would be to fool Kirk into believing he was on a deserted Enterprise in "The Mark Of Gideon." A real ship would likely have all sorts of signs of normal wear and distinctive marks that the crew would be aware of even if they didn't really pay attention to it on a daily basis. That and the personal effects and distinctive decor in crew cabins and crew recreation areas. Unless Kirk was drugged or in a dream like state that's something he should have noticed right off.

Even if the Gideonites somehow managed to get detailed interior blueprints to a Constitution-class starship there is no way in hell they could duplicate a specific ship down to the finest detail to fool someone intimately familiar with that vessel.

Obviously, they had someone on the inside. Simply no other way to pull off what they did.
The just googled it. Starfleet security is really lax.
 
Considering how we saw the characters drinking beverages while on duty (such as Kirk and company on the Bridge) suggests it was a shipwide habit. So seeing such things as occasional stains on tabletops and equipment probably wouldn't be that unusual aboard a "real" ship. Similarly with scuff marks on the floor.

But then there are the odd one's: there is what looks like a stain from greasy food above the communications station in "The Cage".

This is one of those things I had in the back of my mind when pondering how unlikely it would be to fool Kirk into believing he was on a deserted Enterprise in "The Mark Of Gideon." A real ship would likely have all sorts of signs of normal wear and distinctive marks that the crew would be aware of even if they didn't really pay attention to it on a daily basis. That and the personal effects and distinctive decor in crew cabins and crew recreation areas. Unless Kirk was drugged or in a dream like state that's something he should have noticed right off.

Even if the Gideonites somehow managed to get detailed interior blueprints to a Constitution-class starship there is no way in hell they could duplicate a specific ship down to the finest detail to fool someone intimately familiar with that vessel.

Obviously, they had someone on the inside. Simply no other way to pull off what they did.
The just googled it. Starfleet security is really lax.

SpaceGoogle is the shit! :techman:
 
The detail on the rank stripes in "The Cage" and "Where No Man...".

According to an anecdote told at a convention by Richard Arnold, the rank stripes in "The Cage" were created very quickly. They are gold-painted, wide elastic bands, originally used to bundle envelopes, co-opted from the Desilu mail room!

Not sure I believe that based on the detail in the screencap Bill posted - I can't imagine they'd put in more effort for a briefly glimpsed junior crewman, and considering the source...
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top