Everything about this film was just... off.
The uniforms, the music, the script, the dialogue.
Everything about this film was just... off.
The uniforms, the music, the script, the dialogue.
Sorry, can't agree. Loved the uniforms, loved the music!
I came to TMP quite naive about TOS, knowing mainly only random episodes of TOS and TAS. Luckily for me, I got so swept away by the pre-publicity newspaper interviews about the making of TMP, and a friend's enthusiastic description of the gala preview held in Sydney, that I bought and devoured the novelization and the LP soundtrack, then went to see the movie (about five times in as many weeks). Still my favourite film of all time, perhaps now tied with JJ's ST.
The uniforms, THE MUSIC, the script, the dialogue. Everything.
no uniformity of rank insignia, no consistency within departments or among senior or junior officers or non-coms.
Some have useful pockets and some don't
I still think that there was a lot of untapped potential among the crew and background aliens.
The film is very... dated. Especially in comparison to the remaining films.
While I recognize the movie's flaws, it remains my favorite out of the entire franchise. The script was grounded in a solid science fiction concept, unlike any of the others, and the story told had the most in common with the original show. I agree the uniforms needed work, but the direction chosen for Wrath of Khan was way off. The effects were unrivaled in their time, and still hold up well today. And Jerry Goldsmith's soundtrack set the tone for all of Star Trek from that moment on.
The movie was also one of the most successful at the box office, easily earning back production costs and proving that Trek was a viable motion picture franchise. Despite this, Roddenberry's influence was seen as a negative by studio executives (perhaps it was), and it looks like an excuse was engineered to shoulder him aside and put other people in charge of the show.
I'd rather more movies like TMP littered the franchise than Wrath of Khan knock-offs. Properly handled, Trek movies might have been a vehicle for exploring a variety of science fiction concepts instead of just an excuse for blowing up spaceships.
I think people's opinion of TMP has a great deal to do with their age/generation.
If they come to it having already gone through all the other TOS movies,
and TNG, and other series... I can understand unfavorable views.
Old farts like me formed an opinion when the ONLY Star Trek was TOS + TAS and that's it. TMP was THE Motion Picture. Makes a difference.
And even now, decades later, with ALL the ST that has come after it...
I still love it.
The film is very... dated. Especially in comparison to the remaining films.
That's a fuckin' laugh! TMP has aged better than any of the other Trek films in most every respect. Particularly the DE version. It certainly looks more convincingly futuristic than everything else that's followed. Looking at it now it seems more genuine Star Trek to me than most everything that's followed in Trek's name.
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