• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sci-Fi Cinematic & TV Inspirations for Star Trek?

I think it's more likely that both Earth Stood Still and "A Taste of Armageddon" were riffing on the real-world idea of a doomsday weapon so terrible that it would put an end to war. The term "mutual assured destruction" wasn't coined until 1962, after TDTESS, but the idea of the fear of total annihilation putting an end to war had been around since Nobel invented dynamite in 1867. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mutual_assured_destruction#History
 
The first time I saw Forbidden Planet I came away thinking that Star Trek was an unauthorised television adaptation, and how did they not get sued? I still (somewhat) jokingly refer to it as the first Trek movie.

That being said, I picked up a novella on Project Gutenberg a few years ago–and remember neither the author's name nor the title—that was a pulpy scifi space adventure about an interplanetary craft with a Martian crewmember among an otherwise human crew, and that Martian (or were there two?) was just another officer, a natural and respected member of the crew, just like our Vulcan first officer (who was Martian in the earliest drafts). The chief engineer was Scottish. In think it was from the 1930s, and it was so Trek-like, I wondered if it had been another source, but on the other hand, it was so obscure it couldn't possibly be. I'll see if I can find it again. Probably just a bizarre coincidence.

(But Forbidden Planet is still one of my favourite Star Trek films! ;) )
 
The first time I saw Forbidden Planet I came away thinking that Star Trek was an unauthorised television adaptation, and how did they not get sued? I still (somewhat) jokingly refer to it as the first Trek movie.

That being said, I picked up a novella on Project Gutenberg a few years ago–and remember neither the author's name nor the title—that was a pulpy scifi space adventure about an interplanetary craft with a Martian crewmember among an otherwise human crew, and that Martian (or were there two?) was just another officer, a natural and respected member of the crew, just like our Vulcan first officer (who was Martian in the earliest drafts). The chief engineer was Scottish. In think it was from the 1930s, and it was so Trek-like, I wondered if it had been another source, but on the other hand, it was so obscure it couldn't possibly be. I'll see if I can find it again. Probably just a bizarre coincidence.

(But Forbidden Planet is still one of my favourite Star Trek films! ;) )

A classic SF series with ships with Human and Martian members of the same crew is stories by Eric Frank Russell collected in Men, Martians, and Machines (1955). The stories were published from 1941 to 1955. The Martians resembled giant octopi.

Edmund "World Wrecker" Hamilton's Interstellar Patrol series published from 1928 to 1930 featured Humans and strange aliens serving together on the same ships.
 
Last edited:
That being said, I picked up a novella on Project Gutenberg a few years ago–and remember neither the author's name nor the title—that was a pulpy scifi space adventure about an interplanetary craft with a Martian crewmember among an otherwise human crew, and that Martian (or were there two?) was just another officer, a natural and respected member of the crew, just like our Vulcan first officer (who was Martian in the earliest drafts). The chief engineer was Scottish. In think it was from the 1930s, and it was so Trek-like, I wondered if it had been another source, but on the other hand, it was so obscure it couldn't possibly be. I'll see if I can find it again. Probably just a bizarre coincidence.


Fiction is made up of tropes. Lots of works in the same genre use the same tropes. It's not theft or coincidence, it's just using a common language of storytelling, building on the same body of ideas that pervade the whole genre -- like murder mysteries set at wealthy estates, or country songs about your girl/man leaving you.

Star Trek built on the pervasive tropes of its genre, just as many other works did. Martians were the go-to aliens in fiction for generations, from The War of the Worlds to "A Martian Odyssey" to The Martian Chronicles to Martian Manhunter to Marvin the Martian to My Favorite Martian and so on. And Scots have had a reputation as great engineers for centuries, so fiction used to default to portraying engineers as Scottish, much as it used to default to portraying police officers as Irish.

And Spock wasn't definitively Martian in any draft; rather, the original series pitch document written for the networks said that Spock was "probably half Martian," but didn't pin it down beyond that. It probably just used "Martian" as a placeholder because it would be a familiar trope to network executives and get the idea across to them.
 
...
The concept's been around in physics since 1916, but it never seemed to get a lot of attention, since Einstein and Nathan Rosen then rediscovered it in 1935 and then John Wheeler did in 1957 (and he's the one who coined the "wormhole" name at that time). I guess physicists tended to dismiss it because the math showed it would be unstable. Fiction occasionally referenced black holes functioning as passages to other spaces and times, or referred to space warps and folds of various kinds that worked analogously to wormholes, but did surprisingly little with the specific concept of an Einstein-Rosen-style wormhole. So TMP's use of the term was pretty unusual. It was Carl Sagan's novel Contact in 1985 that turned wormholes into a big thing in theoretical physics and science fiction, because he asked physicist Kip Thorne to come up with a credible FTL drive for the novel, and Thorne figured out that wormholes could be made stable with some kind of "exotic matter" with properties like negative energy. (Which, okay, sounds a lot like "protomatter," but Thorne came up with the physics first and then put a name on it, so it's not just empty words.) Other prose SF started picking up on the concept very soon thereafter, and real theoretical physicists embraced Thorne's ideas and developed them further, finding new solutions for wormhole equations and other applications of exotic matter (like Miguel Alcubierre's "warp drive" metric devised in 1994)..

The "hyperspatial tubes" in E.E. Smith's Lensman series were vaguely similar to wormholes and might possibly - repeat possibly - have been suggested by Einstein-Rosen bridges. They first appeared in Gray Lensman (1939).

Still, as far as I know, TNG was the first screen SF production to mention wormholes by name (in "The Price" in 1989), with DS9 then making them a regular story element starting in '93. The idea then got picked up by other screen productions and franchises like Stargate, Sliders, Farscape, etc.."...

What do you mean TNG was the first to mention wormholes by name in 1989? In your previous paragraph you mentioned the mention of wormholes in TMP in 1979.

Andin case anyone thinks that the word "wormhole" wasn't mentioned in TMP:

KIRK: Warp drive, Mister Scott. Ahead, warp one, Mister Sulu.
SULU: Accelerating to warp one, sir. Warp point seven, ...point eight, ...warp one, sir.
KIRK: Mister Decker... Wormhole! ...Get us back on impulse power! Full reverse!
SULU: Negative helm control, Captain! Going reverse on impulse power!
UHURA: Subspace frequencies are jammed, sir. Wormhole effect!
DECKER: Negative control from inertial lag will continue twenty-two point five seconds before forward velocity slows to sub-light speed.
ILIA: Unidentified small object has been pulled into the wormhole with us, Captain! Directly ahead!
KIRK: Forcefields up, full! Put object on viewer. ...Manual override on helm.
SULU: No manual response!
ILIA: Navigational deflectors coming up.
DECKER: Wormhole distortion has over-loaded main power systems!
ILIA: Navigational deflectors inoperative, Captain. Directional control also inoperative.

And:

KIRK: Mister Scott, we need warp drive as soon as possible.

[Enterprise engineering]

SCOTT: Captain, it was the engine imbalance that created the wormhole in the first place. ...It'll happen again if we don't correct it.
 
"Forbidden Planet", in my opinion, is the template on which "Star Trek" was built
For it's time, it was a very intelligent, well constructed piece of cinematic sci fi, although if memory serves me right, it was itself based on Shakespeares' "The Tempest"
The whole Krell story was "cerebral" years before "Star Trek" was accused of being the same.
Dr Morbius must have been an inspiration for Flint in later Trek, in fact, why weren't "Star Trek" producers sued for some of the similarities ?
 
If TMP is so smart, why didn't V'Ger think to wipe the muck off it's nameplate? Why does it think "carbon units" are an infestation when there are pictures of them on the original probe?

Maybe they had scientific advisors, but what they really needed was a common sense one.
 
"Forbidden Planet", in my opinion, is the template on which "Star Trek" was built

One of them, surely, but hardly the exclusive one.

Dr Morbius must have been an inspiration for Flint in later Trek, in fact, why weren't "Star Trek" producers sued for some of the similarities ?

Because that's not how fiction works. Paying homage or drawing on an inspiration is not theft; on the contrary, it's a fundamental part of creativity. (You acknowledged that Forbidden Planet was itself a Tempest homage, so you should already know that.) It's only plagiarism if you take something directly from another work, if you quote verbatim dialogue or use trademarked characters or exactly replicate the plot beat for beat. If the Enterprise had actually gone to Altair IV and met Dr. Morbius and Altaira, that would've been plagiarism. Encountering vaguely similar characters is nothing of the sort.

Basically, the difference is one of whether you do your own work. If you use an existing idea as your starting point and do the work to reshape it into something meaningfully different, then the result is the fruit of your own labors even if its roots in the other work are still clear. But if you directly copy and paste someone else's work and claim that you deserve credit and payment for it as your own, then that is fraud.
 
One of them, surely, but hardly the exclusive one.



Because that's not how fiction works. Paying homage or drawing on an inspiration is not theft; on the contrary, it's a fundamental part of creativity. (You acknowledged that Forbidden Planet was itself a Tempest homage, so you should already know that.) It's only plagiarism if you take something directly from another work, if you quote verbatim dialogue or use trademarked characters or exactly replicate the plot beat for beat. If the Enterprise had actually gone to Altair IV and met Dr. Morbius and Altaira, that would've been plagiarism. Encountering vaguely similar characters is nothing of the sort.

Basically, the difference is one of whether you do your own work. If you use an existing idea as your starting point and do the work to reshape it into something meaningfully different, then the result is the fruit of your own labors even if its roots in the other work are still clear. But if you directly copy and paste someone else's work and claim that you deserve credit and payment for it as your own, then that is fraud.

I wasn't really suggesting plaigerism, but there were clearly parts of Forbidden that inspired, lets say, Trek.
 
Yes, you explicitly were.You asked "Why weren't 'Star Trek' producers sued for some of the similarities?" If the similarities are close enough to be sued for, that is literally the definition of plagiarism.

Oh Jesus, give it a rest
I used a wrong choice of words
Star Trek is similar enough to be regarded as "inspired by" Forbidden Planet
It is also different enough not be regarded as a direct or close copy.
Hope that clears it up for you.
 
I have read on Wikipedia that the 1954 series Rocky Jones, Space Ranger was an early inspiration.

MV5BMTAwNjRlMzAtMWU0NC00Y2EwLWE3NTctOTNkZmZjZjBjY2Q4XkEyXkFqcGdeQXVyMzk3NTUwOQ@@._V1_.jpg
I wonder what 1950s audiences thought of the short skirt uniform. Though overall it's more like a circus acrobat outfit or marching band uniform than what would come to be thought of as a "miniskirt."

Kor
 
Last edited:
Going down the list here are some of my findings so far:
The Day The Earth Stood Still (1951)
Takes place on Earth. Tell me you haven't seen this a million times: "A traveler in a saucer-shaped space craft goes down to an alien planet to extend an olive branch but is met with hostility. He escapes the custody of the aliens and disguises himself as one of them in an effort to learn more about them and eventually make it back to his ship." In the conclusion of the film, Klaatu mentions a type of interplanetary community, and when Earth is ready they could join it. This sounds a little like the United Federation of Planets and the prime directive.

The Thing (1951)
This movie also takes place on earth. However, besides the "Monster of the Day" plot, what is similar between this film and Trek is the organic chemistry between the characters. All of the characters in this film, both male and female, military and civilian, treat each other like equals. There is no "a woman's place is behind a stove"-style dialogue. Everyone's opinion is valued and all the characters (save for a few scientists) are treated as intelligent. Also, if you listen to the power generator start up, it's the phaser/torpedo firing sound.

When Worlds Collide (1951)
This film takes place mostly on earth. Not much that is Trek-like. However, the space ark has a tabletop-style control panel with a middle viewscreen that is attached to forward, side, and rear mounted cameras. And hey, John Hoyt!

Cat-Women of the Moon (1953)
Takes place on the moon. Not a very scientific film. It's like Trek in that a group of explorers stumble upon a dying civilization who wants to seduce them in order to steal their ship and revive their people. Also it features a female navigator who has a hairstyle similar to Number One:

g7tN9HC.jpg


War Of The Worlds (1953)
Once again, takes place on Earth. Aliens come down and zap puny Earthlings. Star Trek did borrow a lot of sound effects from this movie. Also, if you take the Martian Heat Rays...
images


Add 1964 Bell Picturephones...

iijDDbd.jpg


You get the Gooseneck Viewer...
cEfW0DVm.jpg


And...
If you remove the scenes on Earth, the sexist jokes, and make the Monster scarier, Fire Maidens of Outer Space (1956) is a half-way decent season 3 episode of Trek:
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 
Last edited:
Rod Serling's original Twilight Zone clearly affected Star Trek a few years later; some of its writers also wrote for Star Trek. And Star Trek has had some eerie, TZ-like surprises over the years & series. Shatner himself appeared in one of the TZ's most famous eps. A number of ST guest actors had appeared in the TZ, actually. So there were some connections between TZ and ST at the time.
 
Rod Serling's original Twilight Zone clearly affected Star Trek a few years later; some of its writers also wrote for Star Trek. And Star Trek has had some eerie, TZ-like surprises over the years & series. Shatner himself appeared in one of the TZ's most famous eps. A number of ST guest actors had appeared in the TZ, actually. So there were some connections between TZ and ST at the time.

You could say much the same about The Outer Limits. After all, those were the three big "smart" science fiction shows in '60s US TV.
 
The Outer Limits was certainly an influence on NBC's scheduling of Star Trek episodes, if nothing else. Their decision to premiere the show with "The Man Trap" -- let's face it, not one of the best or most representative episodes -- was probably based on the fact that it was a monster story, and The Outer Limits's focus on monster-of-the-week stories probably helped shape the perception that that was what science fiction was supposed to be. Although it goes back further than that, really, since TOL's monster focus was a matter of network fiat rather than the producers' choice. It was probably the wave of monster movies in the '50s and '60s that created the perception that sci-fi needed monsters to draw an audience.

Of course, "The Man Trap" was the sole Trek contribution of George Clayton Johnson, who wrote several Twilight Zone episodes and had a couple of his short stories adapted to TZ by Rod Serling.
 
The Outer Limits was certainly an influence on NBC's scheduling of Star Trek episodes, if nothing else. Their decision to premiere the show with "The Man Trap" -- let's face it, not one of the best or most representative episodes -- was probably based on the fact that it was a monster story, and The Outer Limits's focus on monster-of-the-week stories probably helped shape the perception that that was what science fiction was supposed to be. Although it goes back further than that, really, since TOL's monster focus was a matter of network fiat rather than the producers' choice. It was probably the wave of monster movies in the '50s and '60s that created the perception that sci-fi needed monsters to draw an audience.

Of course, "The Man Trap" was the sole Trek contribution of George Clayton Johnson, who wrote several Twilight Zone episodes and had a couple of his short stories adapted to TZ by Rod Serling.

I certainly loved "The Man Trap." It was certainly one of the creepier, more TZ-flavored Star Trek episodes I mean. And in its climax scene, lol, I've always joked that the salt vampire was Michelle Obama in its true form. Sorry, but their glaring snouts look so similar.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top