More of a homage. Though finding the original source might be hard. It's a pretty old story.Mudd's Women plays with the Mail Order Bride trope that was common in Westerns.
Is that a homage or a rip off?
More of a homage. Though finding the original source might be hard. It's a pretty old story.Mudd's Women plays with the Mail Order Bride trope that was common in Westerns.
Is that a homage or a rip off?
Now, The Savage Curtain.... that would qualify, since it's clearly "inspired" by Arena.
Nah. There's an outline for a story called "Mr. Socrates" in Roddenberry's first draft pitch for Star Trek, dated March 11, 1964:
![]()
Sounds like the basic premise of "The Savage Curtain" to me.
Yes, and they even considered suing the makers of Groundhog Day for plagiarism.
It's likely that the the Doctor's sonic screwdriver and Gary Seven's servo were both inspired by the gadgetry common in the spy movie phenomenon of the 60s. I specifically recall one of the Flint movies (the first one is from '66) having the title character casually boasting of some ridiculous number of covert functions that his ordinary-looking pen was capable of.
Yes, and they even considered suing the makers of Groundhog Day for plagiarism.
Source?
Yes, and they even considered suing the makers of Groundhog Day for plagiarism.
Source?
Follow the link in the post I was responding to.
^^^Source (link)...A brilliant young filmmaker named Jonathan Heap made a superb 30-minute version of my short story 12:01 PM. It was an Oscar nominee in 1990, and was later adapted (very loosely) into a two-hour Fox movie called 12:01.
...
The story was also adapted -- actually plagiarized -- into a major theatrical film in 1993. Jonathan Heap and I were outraged and tried very hard to go after the rascals who had robbed us, but alas, the Hollywood establishment closed ranks. We were no Art Buchwald. After half a year of lawyers' conferences and emotional stress, we agreed to put the matter behind us and get on with our lives.
Now, The Savage Curtain.... that would qualify, since it's clearly "inspired" by Arena.
Nah. There's an outline for a story called "Mr. Socrates" in Roddenberry's first draft pitch for Star Trek, dated March 11, 1964:
![]()
Sounds like the basic premise of "The Savage Curtain" to me.
Not much beyond name dropping Genghis Khan and pulling people from Earth history. The rest of the "Mr. Socrates" premise went into "Bread and Circuses." The idea of "The Savage Curtain" is more of "alien makes our heroes fight bad guys to the death with the lives of the Enterprise crew in the balance."
While "The Doomsday Machine" is an homage to "Moby Dick", Bill Windom worked in his own homage to Humphrey Bogart's "Caine Mutiny" character. Decker fiddled with floppy disks, Queeg with steel ball bearings.
"Turnabout Intruder" took its bodyswap premise from an older story, "Turnabout", which has been remade many other times ("Freaky Friday", "Vice Versa", "18 Again"...).
Turnabout was a 1940 movie based on the 1931 novel of the same name by Thorne Smith.
"Turnabout Intruder" took its bodyswap premise from an older story, "Turnabout", which has been remade many other times ("Freaky Friday", "Vice Versa", "18 Again"...).
Turnabout was a 1940 movie based on the 1931 novel of the same name by Thorne Smith.
Which, in turn, was developed into a 1979 sitcom that starred John Schuck. I was one of twelve people who saw the show.
Turnabout was a 1940 movie based on the 1931 novel of the same name by Thorne Smith.
Which, in turn, was developed into a 1979 sitcom that starred John Schuck. I was one of twelve people who saw the show.
According to the DS9 Companion (p. 703), the producers' goal was to make the Breen as mysterious as possible, in order to give them some unique quality to distinguish them from all the other aliens. So everything about them was hidden -- we couldn't see them and we couldn't hear them. It wasn't about copying something, it was about not repeating something they'd already done with some other Trek alien. Behr wanted their static to resemble the feedback sounds from Lou Reed's Metal Machine Music album, but apparently the final result didn't sound like that.
Closets, lockers, shelves, drawers, supply room.Kira stealing the clothes of Breen
Is Kira sworn to secrecy about what a Breen looks like? Does she know how to get the clothes off a Breen without seeing their face? Did she steal them off the Breen washing line, or perhaps she always carries a Breen fancy dress costume on her just in case? Is that just an area of the end game no one had really thought through very well resulting in a lot of ass pulled explanations?
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.