My point is that in most SF movies no two models of the same craft at different scales are identical. The black model examples aren't generally objects that shift perspective during a shot. This is why I say I think it would be difficult to make elements with two different models match, especially given issues with perspective, etc. that you'd get from having the models of different sizes. I'm not saying it's impossible...just difficult.Black box models aren't anything new; in CE3K they shot a real tollgate, then, in order to get the saucers to fly through them, Jein built black metal boxes that lined up with the real tollgates, then flew the saucers through them on poles and laid that in over the live-action. Of course, that was a lock-off shot, but since Abel and Taylor were ambitious, it would make sense to try to 'up the ante' on TREK. Plus, Trumbull talks about being able to 'scale' camera moves on CE3K, by just dialing in the difference between models and live-action. THAT sounds like what would have been needed on TREK, so again, maybe they were doing hardware/software stuff so that the E&S previs could be ported from mo-con setup to mo-con setup, with 'scaling' already built into the camera directions.
That trench shot in the cards was the one card I had for awhile. A friend had the set, and I got him to let me have that one when he moved. Looked much better than the test on the dvd.
EDIT ADDON: Right after I sent this, I remembered Trumbull saying that Abel's people were shooting the models without motion blur, like stop motion setups (like Ferren/Wallach stuff in TFF, to give a more painful example.) There is support for that story, since Magicam said Abel's folks were claiming the filaments on their model lights would be visible on film and blow the scale, and I can only imagine that being the case if everything was absolutely still in frame.
Ugh...that would've been horrible!! Comparisons with Bran Ferren's FX sends shivvers down my spine.
God-awful -- if that was the look they were going for.
I dunno though...I have a hard time believing they were going for that kind of look. It certainly doesn't fit with any of Abel's other work -- which is generally outstanding, IMO...