We was robbed!!!! I want my ridge!!!!!!
Sometimes, shame can be hidden with a hat:


We was robbed!!!! I want my ridge!!!!!!
It's just about the boldest thing this show could have done, and they went there.I love that transition from The Cage...
I used to have that hat! My uncle was a Marine and gave me one.Sometimes, shame can be hidden with a hat:
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Nice to know people are taking this thread seriously.
By the way, I think that this point made by Melissa George is relevant to the discussion.
IF the bajorans dont start wearing their ear-jewlery on that ear the Ro wore it on, I'm never watching star trek again...Based on the limited negative reactions to other updates to alien makeup throughout fifty plus years of Trek? It’s not exactly a subject that needs to be taken seriously.
Or new to Star Trek in general. I still have no idea why TNG changed the look of Romulans, especially when it had been established that the are supposed to look just like Vulcans (being biologically the same as Vulcans). That was certainly "change for the sake of change."You must be new to Discovery. Change for the sake of change is par for the course there.
The acting was perfectly fine for the period.It might have helped the acting in 'The Cage' back in the day if everyone working on the production had taken it as serious science-fiction rather than another 'Lost in Space' for a different studio. But, they had no idea what it was going to be like in the days ahead.
The actors playing the Talosians stayed in character for the entire shoot.I doubt that in the 1964 there were so many tv shows employing method actors... That acting style was just the standard at the time.
This is a clip from Peyton Place which was filmed in the same year of the Cage (1964) and it was supposed to be a "serious" drama. English isn't my first language, but the acting doesn't seem to me so much better...
Oh we take it very seriously. It is you we don’t take seriously, Mr. Barris.Nice to know people are taking this thread seriously.
The actors playing the Talosians stayed in character for the entire shoot.
Not going to lie: this made me feel warm and fuzzy.Oh we take it very seriously. It is you we don’t take seriously, Mr. Barris.![]()
looking at that clip, a lot of it has to do with the inflections. And if my memory is correct, that was done in that style, because audio recording equipment at that time wasn't as good as it is now and inflecting that way made the sentences more audible (or something similar, it's been a long while since I read about that issue)This is a clip from Peyton Place which was filmed in the same year of the Cage (1964) and it was supposed to be a "serious" drama. English isn't my first language, but the acting doesn't seem to me so much better...
The acting was perfectly fine for the period.
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