Here is a previous thread on this subject:
https://www.trekbbs.com/threads/did-they-ever-release-the-god-thing.303228/
https://www.trekbbs.com/threads/did-they-ever-release-the-god-thing.303228/
I groaned so much at that.Plus, the opening to X-Men: Apocalypse had Jesus dragging the cross... at an angle... making an X...
Long long time ago, back when fan film creators were allowed to speak what was on their minds and share concepts without getting their eyes poked out, Patty Wright sent me a seven or eight page? incomplete script. Patty used to write back and forth with Walter Koenig and my dear friend Amy Beth. Just read it, jot down your thoughts and don't share. This was like 20 years ago but a captain that finds himself in a room with fireplace and he doesn't know how he got there and now he's looking for clues. My Note was something like, "It needs a lot of work which would be right up Amy's alley".So a live action, sexier and edgier version of "Magicks of Megas Tu"? Just take it to my veins.
Sounds more like the worst parts of STV:TFF to me. On steroids. And I don't even want to think about mixing Star Trek with the whole sordid Left Behind franchise.So a live action, sexier and edgier version of "Magicks of Megas Tu"? Just take it to my veins.
I'd pay real money to see Captain Kirk deliver a flying leg kick to Kirk Cameron!Sounds more like the worst parts of STV:TFF to me. On steroids. And I don't even want to think about mixing Star Trek with the whole sordid Left Behind franchise.
I'd pay real money to see Captain Kirk deliver a flying leg kick to Kirk Cameron!
Umm... is there a kind of kick that isn't a leg kick?
In the term "flying leg kick," leg isn't modifying kick, but rather flying is modifying leg.
Wow, that sounds really bad. The more I hear about what unfiltered Gene Rodenberry would have been like, the more I'm glad he managed to surround himself with other, more talented people. I know he deserves respect for creating the franchise, but the more I hear about the guy, the more I realize that most of the best parts of the franchise came from other people.I've read the script. Trust me when I say it's the most Roddenberry thing I've ever read... in all of the terrible ways you could imagine. Kirk has a zero-g naked oil fight with women that have been taken over by this god entity. There's a fight with Jesus on the Bridge of the Enterprise.
Awful, awful, awful, awful. I can see why the attempts to novelize it have consistently run aground
the more I hear about the guy, the more I realize that most of the best parts of the franchise came from other people.
I've been saying that for years. The pilot episode that got TOS on the air was written by someone else.
Klingons, Romulans, tribbles, almost everything about Vulcan biology and society, Spock's family, Khan, Edith Keeler, Harcourt Fenton Mudd and Cyrano Jones, Kor, Koloth, and Kang, none of it from Roddenberry's pen.
And after TOS, he did one movie and some of the worst episodes of one of Star Trek's worst seasons (TNG's first), and he reportedly rewrote a lot of the others. And it's no secret that a lot of TNG was developed by other people, including David Gerrold.
Roddenberry started it but what he wrote wasn't long enough to be published as a novel. Susan Sackett, Michael Jan Friedman, David Alexander, and Walter Koenig all had access to some or all of GR's material and did at least some work on expanding it to novel length, but it seems that none of them had access to each other's efforts, some of which didn't get very far at all.So is there something of a manuscript of this? Is there actually something written? And does anyone have it? I just ask because I hate to see unreleased stuff disappear forever. It's important to preserve these things.
Anonymos Collector said:It had forgotten its name. That had been forgotten those eons ago when it first knew itself to be dying. Stars without number had ignited and faded as it searched this prison galaxy for a way to youth and wholeness again. Although it would be eons more before it would cease to move and think, that end now seemed perilously close.
Pages 1 - 68 are photocopies (page 40 is missing). Marked GR and dated between 8/19/1976 and 9/10/1976.
Pages 69 - 152 are mostly on onion skin typewritten pages, initialed "W.K.," and dated between 10/29/1976 and 12/21/1976. Each of these 83 pages is also autographed by Walter Koenig, as is the title page.
In general, the descriptions of the novel on your site are accurate, except possibly Chekov having become captain.
When reading it, I was struck by two things: one being the controversial nature of the material as well as the similarities to ST:TMP in its various incarnations (novel, script, and film). Some of the similarities include:
So, a good portion of the Roddenberry portions of this novel were recycled for use in ST: TMP. Or taking a different perspective, this novel (based on Gene Roddenberry's 1975 draft) really represents the genesis of ST:TMP, when combined with elements from "The Changeling" and Genesis II's "Robots Return."
So maybe, Star Trek: The God Thing has been here all along.
Re: Susan Sackett - yes, it is confirmed. Pages 58-63 have Kirk engaged in what could be best described as nude oil wrestling with three women. "They were nude of course except for their paragame sandals, and young women that way had a disconcerting way of looking quite different. It disconcerted Kirk that the thought made his own genitals tighten against the metallic mesh which protected male vulnerability during the game" (from page 59).
Also confirmed about the entity appearing first as the prophet Hamid, "a tall striking Masai black man of thirty years" "born in the calendar year 1969 in time to give his life in 1996" (from pages 130-131). The entity then transforms himself into Jesus of Nazareth after it realizes that no one knew of Hamid.
Kirk stood near the center of the crowd at the bus station. He felt it important to blend in and so he smiled and applauded lightly as the pretty eight year old in the [illegible] costume mastered her simulated fiber wool jump rope with a succession of graceful little hops. The innocence of the wide eyed child was both a joy and a sadness to him. "The passing of things dear," Kirk thought. There would be no freedom from sin, from guilt for a world overlorded by a vengeful self-proclaimed God-thing. There would be fear, there would be treachery. There would be death and destruction in the name of sanctity. There would again be the Dark Ages.
As the men approached, those in waiting began to applaud. Even as they pumped his hand and embraced him warmly, Kirk's eyes were raised toward the stars. Next time, he thought, next time... please... let it just be Klingons.
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