I say its a cadet tour at a facility that is building the Enterprise and that the construction sets seen in the movie trailer will be cgi'd in. If you look at the trailer in the background shots you can see refinery type structures.
Why not?I really don't think we'll be spending any appreciable time dealing with the construction of the Enterprise. It probably won't be addressed at all.
Here's a high-tech look at the main controls for Space Shuttle Atlantis.
And the link above shows the control panel for an F-16 fighter jet.
Both of these vehicles are 'cutting-edge' scientific and military vehicles. The Star Trek shuttle pics are comparative to each.
Why not?I really don't think we'll be spending any appreciable time dealing with the construction of the Enterprise. It probably won't be addressed at all.
I think Vektor stated the point quite well. My brother does NOT like Star Trek. He always thought Trekkies were "freaks and weirdos (sic)" because my ex-girlfriend would bore us for hours about some nit-picky thing. These days he actually discusses it with me occasionally or will ask a question about something he heard that was sci-fi related. His reasoning came out one day... "Your not as fanatic about it as Kim always was. I can actually ask a question and you don't roll your eyes at me."Good Lord! Leave it to Star Trek fans to act as if some dirt on the floor of a fictional, 23rd century shuttlecraft is the cinematic equivalent of a human rights violation. No wonder everybody in the real world thinks we're all freaks and weirdos.
And thank you for backing up my point about literally hating people, and feeling free to attack personally anyone that doesn't whole-sale back up the greatness of this movie.
And I'm sure Akiraprise, who reads this thread every day, will give you a warning for calling everyone that doesn't like the look so far as 'freaks and weridos'.
I do agree that the trailer was done almost entirely as what it was INTENDED TO DO... get the audience excited about SOMETHING, then, at the end, spring it on them that it's (GASP!)... Star Trek.Why not?I really don't think we'll be spending any appreciable time dealing with the construction of the Enterprise. It probably won't be addressed at all.
Because it simply ain't that dramatic. Odds are the trailer was more of a thematic exercise, showing the Star Trek legacy 'under construction' as it were. I doubt they're going to want to waste story time on its construction, at least no more than a scene or two, or a cheesy montage. With the extensive list of characters, they've got enough to do fitting all of them in, without unnecessary shipbuilding scenes.
I do agree that the trailer was done almost entirely as what it was INTENDED TO DO... get the audience excited about SOMETHING, then, at the end, spring it on them that it's (GASP!)... Star Trek.
I would be deeply surprised if we saw that sequence in the film. It was created to do a job... and it's done it remarkably well, I think. The studio has gotten their money's worth out of it.
I can't see any way, in a real STORYTELLING CONTEXT, that seeing the ship put together would be exciting for "general audiences," or even for most Trek fans for that matter.
Here's a high-tech look at the main controls for Space Shuttle Atlantis.
As , of course, designed in the early 1970s.
And the link above shows the control panel for an F-16 fighter jet.
As, of course, designed in 1974, with modifications through the last decade. The F-16 has been cut from production for 15 years now.
Both of these vehicles are 'cutting-edge' scientific and military vehicles. The Star Trek shuttle pics are comparative to each.
Actually, neither of each are, and are you honestly saying that since this shuttle which is still 200 years old looks like them, it's accurate?
I guarantee that, in 200 (or 300) years, the "future" as imagined in 1966 and the "future" as imagined in 2008 will look equally silly. For that matter, you'd probably have to be an expert even to tell which is which.
I would've agreed with you prior to Orci's statements at "Grand Slam", but it seems that Orci implied that they would perhaps be showing the assembly of the pieces of the Enterprise in space.I really don't think we'll be spending any appreciable time dealing with the construction of the Enterprise. It probably won't be addressed at all.
Why is that wrong? Maybe they are building the Enterprise? We don't know yet ...The only thing that I can see as 'wrong' in those pictures are that the miners are wearing Enterprise arrowheads.
The only place I saw the "delta insignia" in those nine photos was the one photo that showed the gray unifom jacket. Do you have other photos?The only thing that I can see as 'wrong' in those pictures are that the miners are wearing Enterprise arrowheads. But I've moaned about that elsewhere, so I'll shut up.
The shuttle does look a little TNG-era, but...meh, it's alright.
Well, "antiquated" is a pretty... subjective... term.I'm not saying they should somehow, magically, predict what controls, etc, will be used in 2260 and make them for the screen. I'm saying that it looks pretty bad to use controls and interfaces that are antiquated now because they were made in 1974.I guarantee that, in 200 (or 300) years, the "future" as imagined in 1966 and the "future" as imagined in 2008 will look equally silly. For that matter, you'd probably have to be an expert even to tell which is which.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.