Actually, a lot of the wardrobe budget went to the 19th century sailing uniforms that were used for a total of about 15 minutes. For a holodeck scene that was really unnecessary to the movie's plot.
The proposals look too formal and too change-for-the-sake-of-change; its OK for the uniforms to look a little television-ish as this was also the last movie of the E-D.
Actually, a lot of the wardrobe budget went to the 19th century sailing uniforms that were used for a total of about 15 minutes. For a holodeck scene that was really unnecessary to the movie's plot.
Aye, the movie was originally supposed to open the TNG segment with a big ass battle scene of the Enterprise swooping in the save the Armagosa conservatory from a Romulan attack, until Jeri Taylor took a look at the script and commented "You know, you guys need to open this movie with something fun". So we got 15 minutes of the crew farting about in 18th century clothes instead.![]()
Actually, a lot of the wardrobe budget went to the 19th century sailing uniforms that were used for a total of about 15 minutes. For a holodeck scene that was really unnecessary to the movie's plot.
Aye, the movie was originally supposed to open the TNG segment with a big ass battle scene of the Enterprise swooping in the save the Armagosa conservatory from a Romulan attack, until Jeri Taylor took a look at the script and commented "You know, you guys need to open this movie with something fun". So we got 15 minutes of the crew farting about in 18th century clothes instead.![]()
Yeah, never mind that that "fun" cost half the movie's budget on a pointless Worf-gets-promoted scene which was completely irrelevant to the story, as his promotion had nothing to do with anything. And any "fun" that the scene might have conveyed was completely disrupted by Picard's news about his brother and nephew. And it made Riker look like more of a dick than he usually does. Thanks, Jeri!
Yeah, never mind that that "fun" cost half the movie's budget on a pointless Worf-gets-promoted scene which was completely irrelevant to the story, as his promotion had nothing to do with anything. And any "fun" that the scene might have conveyed was completely disrupted by Picard's news about his brother and nephew. And it made Riker look like more of a dick than he usually does. Thanks, Jeri!
I did not know it was so expensive. I've always suspected the entire reason for that sequence was to get to the visual of Picard, Riker et al on the starship bridge wearing the age-of-fighting-sail uniforms. It was around the time that the Patrick O'Brian books were becoming "a thing."
IIRC, the TNG hero unis cost $3000 apiece. So that's $30,000 wasted.
Not wasted.
A way of making the movie look better in every single scene with the main characters (aside from Picard and Data).
Having Riker looking too fat for his clothes is inexplicable in a movie with a budget of $38 million.
Besides you could sell screen-used clothes on ebay for a great deal more than $3000 after the movie was completed I'm sure.![]()
Oh yeah, I totally forgot about that. I'm still wondering why on earth they would think that Kirk getting randomly shot in the back would have been any kind of satisfying death for the audience. I mean, I know that the production was rushed, but still...that was the best they could come up with?
Apologies for being a noob- but what was the original scene? I always assumed it was just a different take in the Death Valley setting?
Actually, a lot of the wardrobe budget went to the 19th century sailing uniforms that were used for a total of about 15 minutes. For a holodeck scene that was really unnecessary to the movie's plot.
Aye, the movie was originally supposed to open the TNG segment with a big ass battle scene of the Enterprise swooping in the save the Armagosa conservatory from a Romulan attack, until Jeri Taylor took a look at the script and commented "You know, you guys need to open this movie with something fun". So we got 15 minutes of the crew farting about in 18th century clothes instead.![]()
The other "fun" idea to open the 24th-century part of the film involved the bridge crew pushing eggs around with their noses on the floor of the holodeck.
I've sometimes thought a halfway competent script doctor would have dispensed with the first twenty pages of the script, ditching the Enterprise-B opening and the "fun" intro because neither is, strictly speaking, necessary. Both are, basically, "Meet the characters" scenes, but that's all they do -- introduce the characters. Much as I enjoy those scenes, they don't introduce plot or conflict. If you start the film with the Enterprise-D at Amargosa, it's the same movie.
The other "fun" idea to open the 24th-century part of the film involved the bridge crew pushing eggs around with their noses on the floor of the holodeck. They realized how stupid that sounded (and would look), whereupon they went with Worf's sailing ship promotion.
I've sometimes thought a halfway competent script doctor would have dispensed with the first twenty pages of the script, ditching the Enterprise-B opening and the "fun" intro because neither is, strictly speaking, necessary. Both are, basically, "Meet the characters" scenes, but that's all they do -- introduce the characters. Much as I enjoy those scenes, they don't introduce plot or conflict. If you start the film with the Enterprise-D at Amargosa, it's the same movie.
But then you turn Kirk getting lost in the Nexus during an action-packed scene into one of lame exposition between Crusher and Riker later in the film.
The other "fun" idea to open the 24th-century part of the film involved the bridge crew pushing eggs around with their noses on the floor of the holodeck.
Er, what?
I've sometimes thought a halfway competent script doctor would have dispensed with the first twenty pages of the script, ditching the Enterprise-B opening and the "fun" intro because neither is, strictly speaking, necessary. Both are, basically, "Meet the characters" scenes, but that's all they do -- introduce the characters. Much as I enjoy those scenes, they don't introduce plot or conflict. If you start the film with the Enterprise-D at Amargosa, it's the same movie.
Then how would Kirk have ended up in the Nexus?
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