Has anyone any modern fan versions of updating the TOS effects?
As a rule you don’t change someone’s original work.
and we saw the pre-Kirk era pike enterprise during the episode menagerie.
Imagine them doing this with the Discoprise bridgeHas anyone any modern fan versions of updating the TOS effects?
And yes, I'm a huge nerd. It's a slow day here at work.
Our HD TVs are just able to see the TOS Enterprise better now.![]()
Imagine them doing this with the Discoprise bridge![]()
The reason we were never supposed to see it on TV was because Paramount wanted the Sovereign class to be a movie exclusive ship and they feared seeing if it were on TV, no one would go to the theatres to see a movie with it. But it's been eighteen years since the last movie to feature the Enterprise E was released, and in that time there have been three other movies that haven't used it at all. I guess they can safely show it on TV now with no risk to the movies.Although we do see a model of the Enterprise-E in Picard’s vault in the Starfleet Archives, a ship that we were originally never supposed to see on tv in any form.
The Galaxy class ship displayed does have 1701-D written on it just outside the main shuttlebay.Were either of those ships labeled (onscreen) as Enterprise? The 1701 doesn't appear to be. Perhaps it's just a generic Constitution and Galaxy, or two versions of the Yamato or something.
The Enterprise may have been a Mk. II/Mk. III Constitution, but the mesh is of a Mk. I that was never refit.
Maybe the hologram just cycles through random ship classes and just happened to go through an early Constitution to a two-nacelle Galaxy.
It just doesn't seem like it would be Picard's ship on permanent display, since in the very same scene, some goober doesn't even know who Picard is.
See what Doug Drexler did for Star Trek Continues. He's talked about it pretty extensively. It wasn't an update but a way to get the CGI for STC to look like the original model looked under the lighting conditions of the TOS. It got a little wierd in the final episode but all in all he did a great. job.Has anyone any modern fan versions of updating the TOS effects?
*cough, cough* TOS-R *cough cough*
Yes, but I’m saying that’s one curiosity created because of the idea that maybe the VFX won’t hold up to HD (whereas the new ship shots are poor CGI) and I’d also argue the year was, you know, 2006. Special editions were still a thing back then: they’re not something to think about in 2020 if anyone is paying attention to the way 4K releases are made of theatrical cuts (because many SEs were done in HD, like that of Superman), and then it’s not like anyone’s really asking for an improved version of George Lucas’s SEs. A director can get away with a “final cut”, but that’s about it.
When CBS made TOS-R, I was initially excited about it because at the time, I was in ‘things need to be changed’ mode. Over time, however, I’ve changed my tune and now feel that even if it was a necessity to update the VFX for a high-definition transfer, that the new effects should have been visually indistinguishable from the original. Doing what they did took the charm and nostalgia away from the original look and feel of TOS, in my opinion. I now wish it had never been done at all.
When I watch on Blu-ray, I just toggle on the original effects. Most of the CGI was pretty substandard, even at the time.
I don't have the blurays; I've just watched it on broadcast TV (which shows TOS-R), so I don't have the option to toggle back to the old VFX.
I don't know why but blu-rays are seem far more scratch resistant than DVDsDepending on one's financial state and love of TOS, I found the Blu-ray's to be a great buy. I've owned mine for ten years now. I believe you can get the entire series for around $50.
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