Just wow.
That is all.
That is all.
Uh, strictly speaking there was no non Federation vessel.I won't give a full review just yet, but I agree -- the ships looked very plastic-y and almost cartoonish, *especially* the, uh, non-Federation vessel.
Uh, strictly speaking there was no non Federation vessel.
Doug Drexler had a way of making the visuals look reasonably faithful to the TOS aesthetic. Thats simply gone here. Nothing looks TOS like in the ship and space visuals--it looks very TNG like.
Oops! Right, I momentarily forgot about that one. At least it didn't look all plated like other efforts, but I still didn't care for the all grey colour.But, there was a non-UFP ship in this episode.
I noticed that, too. No, I don't think the TOS turbolift ceiling has ever been shown before.Hopefully this will be only a minor spoiler, but had the ceiling of the turbolift been shown in STC before? A nice touch, regardless.
Hopefully this will be only a minor spoiler, but had the ceiling of the turbolift been shown in STC before? A nice touch, regardless.
Interesting. I didn't notice that.You just reminded me of something that's been puzzling me since I first watched the episode. This is gonna be a tough one to dance around with, so I'll put it in a spoiler protector:
There was something about the Defiant's bridge that looked different than STC's bridge set, and I don't think it had to do with the lighting. I don't know if it was just a matter of having different displays, but the set looked like it might be from another production, possibly even New Voyages? I also saw that the Defiant bridge had more of the starboard-side railing going toward the viewscreen than I remember STC's bridge having. Maybe I'm misremembering how much they've built?
Agree. I don't think it "decanonizes" ENT because the explanation given allows for multiple outcomes.The interior shots and acting were definitely still as good.
But the external shots were...off? maybe due to the necessity of the larger backdrop they used for this one.
The episode does decanonise the Enterprise followup of the Defiant so it's clear they were going for their own story, which is fine, the loss of the intact Defiant has a lot of potential. Infact the Interphase allows for a myriad universe effect where every outcome of it's loss happens, "splinters" spreading out from one event. [Since the IaMD two parter has the Defiant crew still lying dead exactly as they were in Tholian Web only a short time after the ship fully disappeared]
The Klingon ship was iffy, I'm not sure it even needed to be there except to demonstrate Ti's hostility. I'm not sure if anyone's tried for a silvery look for the ships but battleship grey gets boring after a while.
The situation with Ti and OldKirk feel a little too close to Cochrane and the Companion, as well as Ti coming too close to Next Generations episode centered around the Enterprise D's computer becoming self aware. AI going rogue is all too common too, maybe if Ti had been benevolent, but needed to be sent back into the singularity with the Defiant to preserve the timeline?
And the Thomas Riker clone storyline, I'm sensing a theme here.
Transport enchancers...oh boy, they went down the Nemesis portable transporter unit route, quickly accessing the Defiant's own transporter grid and locking it into the Enterprise's would have worked, they did sync transporter pads in more than one TOS episode.
And the tractor beam was jarring. They drowned out the old sound effect with a phaser sound for some reason. Having a strobe light on the underside of the Defiant with a glittering effect on the Enterprise hull might have been easier, cheaper, and less...offputting. I always liked the idea of TOS's beams being invisible except for slight illumination from some angles. That and the Defiant CGI model weirdly fish-eye's as it turns to move away.
It's more those technical aspects that stand out as like I said, everything that happened on set was nicely done.
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