I disagree with you on several levels, not the least of which is a mistake on your part.the fact that it got Crusher back out of Starfleet Medical for the second time and back with Picard on the Enterprise.
Nemesis, in spite of its flaws, was about change. Death in Winter negated some of the best changes and substituted fannish changes in the place of actual dramatic changes.
KRAD said:
If you think Picard and Crusher actually being a couple isn't a major change, then I wonder whether or not you ever watched the show. This is what should've happened after "Attached," frankly, and is a change that -- like Riker and Troi's wedding in the movie -- was long overdue.
captcalhoun said:
martin madden
Cicero said:
captcalhoun said:
martin madden
If only. Better directed and photographed, his could've been an excellent, warmly memorable scene. (And Steven Culp is an excellent actor.)
The seatbelts, on the other hand, were stupid.
Christopher said:
Cicero said:
captcalhoun said:
martin madden
If only. Better directed and photographed, his could've been an excellent, warmly memorable scene. (And Steven Culp is an excellent actor.)
Steven Culp is an excellent actor, but that scene would've had to be written completely differently as well as directed better.
(And if the quality of the photography looked lacking, that could be simply because it was a rough edit from cut footage, and thus wasn't processed and tweaked and beautified to the extent that the final film was.)
It was unfunny, it was embarrassingly out of character for Riker, it was profoundly inappropriate in the wake of Data's death, and it was an unnecessary piece of padding on the end of the film. The only thing about it that worked was the casting of Culp, but he had nothing good to work with, nor did anyone else involved.
The seatbelts, on the other hand, were stupid.
The seatbelts made a great deal of sense, execution notwithstanding. What's stupid is that they never had them before now and only tacked them on here as an afterthought. (Or rather, that the seat-restraint concept from ST:TMP and TWOK was later abandoned. Not to mention that ENT gave Archer's command chair a safety harness in the third or fourth season, so that's twice that Starfleet has abandoned basic common-sense safety for roughly a century.)
Cicero said:
(And if the quality of the photography looked lacking, that could be simply because it was a rough edit from cut footage, and thus wasn't processed and tweaked and beautified to the extent that the final film was.)
I was referring to the photography, not the printing.![]()
I'm fairly sure the scene felt unfunny, cold, and out of character because of its execution, not its paper particulars.
Truly, if a starship has inertial dampers which avoid destroying the crew when the ship moves at high impulse, there should be no need for seatbelts when the ship absorbs a hit.
That was one thing rhat was pretty cool about the SW prequel DVDs, they actually went back and cleaned up the deleated scenes, and added SFX and everything.Christopher said:
Cicero said:
(And if the quality of the photography looked lacking, that could be simply because it was a rough edit from cut footage, and thus wasn't processed and tweaked and beautified to the extent that the final film was.)
I was referring to the photography, not the printing.![]()
Which is why I specified a rough edit. Most movie scenes are shot with a good deal of "coverage" -- the same scene shot from multiple different angles and different takes. In the final cut, the best takes and the best angles are put together with care. In a deleted scene on a DVD, the editing might not be quite so careful, and less effective angles and shots might be chosen.
I'm fairly sure the scene felt unfunny, cold, and out of character because of its execution, not its paper particulars.
Trent Roman said:
^ Given how prone starship consoles are to exploding, I'm not sure I'd want to be tied down in my seat.
I've been wondering the same thing myself lately. Been buying Trek books from Wal-Mart for awhile, but I haven't seen any in the last few months. I've also only seen Star Wars books once in the same amount of time, and since then I haven't seen any tie ins except copies of Peter David's Fantastic Four books that been there for ages. FYI I did get the SW books I saw the one time they were there.Ro_Laren said:
Does anyone know if Resistance is being sold at Wal-Mart? I tried to by The Buried Age there, but it wasn't there (or any other Trek books). I hope Wal-Mart is still selling Trek books!!!
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