Maybe they were discovered after the Farpoint and Code of Honour had been signed off as completed, we know they rushed to meet the deadline. It's a real shame though, reminds me to a far lesser degree of the first few episodes of TOSR with the first Enterprise model.^ This is a comparison of two images from the remaster. The first pic is of the CGI replacement in EaF, the second pic is of the original model shot they later rediscovered (but did not insert into EaF for some reason).
There's been no official announcement that they will.Does anyone know if they are going to put all of these HD episodes on Netflix instant streaming?
There's been no official announcement that they will.Does anyone know if they are going to put all of these HD episodes on Netflix instant streaming?
It wouldn't surprise me if they do, but certainly not this soon after the disc release (they want to recoup their costs) - and they might be waiting until the entire series is done.
Question: Has the "strobing" concentric circles/arcs always been there for a phaser hit? They seem more "obvious" now on the BD and sort-of hokey looking.
People are complaining about a missing phaser blast in Heart of Glory, the scene is editing slightly different, you see the shot from the gun, then it cuts to the security guy getting hit. The sequence looks better now, with the beams coming from the right place.
-Chris
So wait, you're saying that rather than forgetting to add an effect, they actually fixed a continuity error? I guess I have to watch the DVD and Blu-ray again.
Okay, so I just examined the DVD and Blu-ray again and the sequence is edited exactly the same. The phaser beam is genuinely missing and it's a full-on mistake -- there has been NO attempt at correcting beam placement (one isn't required).
Funny thing is, they went to all the trouble of erasing the security guard's pyrotechnic igniter squib from his uniform AND the wire coming out of his pant leg!Everything looks great... except for the missing beam.
So wait, you're saying that rather than forgetting to add an effect, they actually fixed a continuity error? I guess I have to watch the DVD and Blu-ray again.
Okay, so I just examined the DVD and Blu-ray again and the sequence is edited exactly the same. The phaser beam is genuinely missing and it's a full-on mistake -- there has been NO attempt at correcting beam placement (one isn't required).
Funny thing is, they went to all the trouble of erasing the security guard's pyrotechnic igniter squib from his uniform AND the wire coming out of his pant leg!Everything looks great... except for the missing beam.
You don't need to see the beam twice do you???? They also never went back to digitally erase the power cords coming out of the sickbay beds either.
-Chris
There's been no official announcement that they will.Does anyone know if they are going to put all of these HD episodes on Netflix instant streaming?
It wouldn't surprise me if they do, but certainly not this soon after the disc release (they want to recoup their costs) - and they might be waiting until the entire series is done.
I like Homesoil overall but, yeah, the depiction of the silicone entity doesn't translate well. Neither the blinking Christmas lights nor the giant novelty quartz crystal someone bought from their recent trip to a tourist cave.
Not sure how else they could have pulled it off, but...
I do like how it shows how overly concerned Federation and human scientists are with disturbing life on alien planets. The female terraforming scientist is touchingly upset that they may have disturbed a indigenous life and even the head of the operation seems bothered by the idea once it becomes clear the "Microbrain" is not only life but sentient and even intelligent life. (This in contrast to how Dr. Stubbs behaves in a similar situation in Season 3's "Evolution.")
It's interesting that this episode also suggests the terraforming techniques is a decades or century(ies)-long process when only 70-some years ago in Star Trek II techniques were developed to do it in minutes. (Genesis) Granted, Genesis was a flop due to use of protomatter but "realistically" you'd think the ideas would have been refined and better used in the intervening time to make a more stable device.
But I prefer the long, painstaking, terraforming method here as opposed to the magical McGuffin method suggested by TWK.
One buggy thing is how easily Dr. Crusher was able to, through the computer, determine that the unknown sample they had was a lifeform. Even with all of the computer's mad skillz you'd think determining something is life or not would be harder than asking the computer a few easy questions and getting IT to speculate and theorize on the sample.
I also enjoy Data's agreement with the Microbrain that "ugly bags of mostly water" is an apt description of humanoid life.
Also, everyone seems amazed at how the Microbrain is a non-organic (crystalline?) lifeform. Aren't the Tholians a non-organic, crystalline, lifeform?
I never thought about it before, but you’re right, the broad strokes of the stories are the same.In some ways, Home Soil is pretty similar to TOS's The Devil In the Dark.
Hoping for info for us Germans ...
And those of us in the UK.
The Quinn and Remmick stuff was really well done as well. I haven't seen Conspiracy in awhile, but I assume at this point they were still their normal, human selves? Quinn's overly nasty attitude towards his old friend Picard early on definitely had me wondering...
The only weak point of the remastered episode I thought was the Starbase. Not sure how much of that was the original model/painting/whatever, but it just looked VERY fake and videogamey.
Pretty sure they were both unchanged at that point... it would be odd for Quinn to tell Picard about a possible conspiracy if he was trying to conceal one at the same time (notice how his attitude is completely flipped in "Conspiracy", denying anything's wrong). Also, if either of them were infected, why didn't they try to infect an officer on board the Enterprise to destroy it before it got to Earth (like the Horatio)?
The only weak point of the remastered episode I thought was the Starbase. Not sure how much of that was the original model/painting/whatever, but it just looked VERY fake and videogamey.
Does anyone else thing the girl candidate in this episode comes across as way out of her league? Somehow either how the character was written or how the actress portrays her she doesn't seem like the ultra-smart Starfleet material. And I'm pretty sure Wesley was passed over for entrance due to Affirmative Action.
I believe you're thinking of the Spacedock in 1100etc, not the matte painting of a ground-based installation from Coming of Age.The only weak point of the remastered episode I thought was the Starbase. Not sure how much of that was the original model/painting/whatever, but it just looked VERY fake and videogamey.
In the documentary the one responsable for the composition took some liberty to enhance the sequence according to his personal taste (adding glow around the planet for example).
I'm certain whoever wrote that went on to enjoy a long fruitful career writing speeches for American politicians.Hehe... I love the little details you now get with the BluRays, for example the gibberish text in the newspaper of the Dixon Hill episode:
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