Yeah, that leaves something to be desired. I always get the sense he can barely contain his glee, "Hey, I'm in a Trek fan film! This is so cool!"Grant's acting....
He's been that way since day one.
Yeah, that leaves something to be desired. I always get the sense he can barely contain his glee, "Hey, I'm in a Trek fan film! This is so cool!"Grant's acting....
Funny I feel the opposite about Kipleigh Brown's role. I think she's fine in her role, but there's no bloody way you're gonna sell me that this is the same yeoman Smith from the second pilot...
Too bad she didn't want to cut her hair short and dye it brown, she would have been great as that yellowshirt helmsperson (what was her name, Lt. Rahda?) Brown would have fit that character perfectly...
We'd have missed out on that great red hair, though.Casting her as Yeoman Rand might have been limiting. Casting her as Helen Noel would have been interesting. She could have done everything we've seen McKennah do so far.
Some women do change their hair colour. I've known some who have gone through many differents hues.We'd have missed out on that great red hair, though.
Yeah that's my thinking on Noel as well, plus there's history and chemistry with Kirk.Casting her as Yeoman Rand might have been limiting. Casting her as Helen Noel would have been interesting. She could have done everything we've seen McKennah do so far.
Yeah I noticed a couple that stood out to me as not-quite-right.Original music cues fantastic, but have to be used sparingly and appropriately
Source, please....When it aired in the 1960s, ST tried to stay away from that distinct "1930s Space Opera Serial" vibe that was still around on TV. That's why the Gooseneck Viewers were removed from the Bridge after The Cage....
* Original music cues fantastic, but have to be used sparingly and appropriately
My bad. By 'original music cues' I meant as in using The Original Series cues, not specially-composed music. Have fixedAFAIK, there was no original score composed for this episode. Vic was using the library cues from TOS...
Source, please.
As I recall it was said to be a production decision in that you had them showing video of a person talking - and they didn't want to have to do a process shot (which equals more expense and more post production time on an already tight schedule) every time someone talked over the intercom system to someone on the Bridge.I don't have one. That's my own opinion about the stylistic differences between The Cage and the rest of TOS. And my perception of TOS in relation to Sci-fi of the same time period too.
About the Goosenecks, I don't think we have an official reason why they were discarded. Ex Astris Scientia speculates it's because they could have been expensive. The Matt Jefferies Wikipedia Article claims he disliked the Gooseneck Viewers, yet there's no source too.
As I recall it was said to be a production decision in that you had them showing video of a person talking - and they didn't want to have to do a process shot (which equals more expense and more post production time on an already tight schedule) every time someone talked over the intercom system to someone on the Bridge.
(and yes, they did occasionally still did this if someone was in the Briefing room, or somehow next to a 'viewer' - but they could more easily pick and choose when they wanted to have such a shot if they felt it added something to a scene.
Then you should have added "Maybe" to "that's why the Gooseneck Viewers were removed from the Bridge after The Cage...."I don't have one. That's my own opinion about the stylistic differences between The Cage and the rest of TOS. And my perception of TOS in relation to Sci-fi of the same time period too.
About the Goosenecks, I don't think we have an official reason why they were discarded. Ex Astris Scientia speculates it's because they could have been expensive. The Matt Jefferies Wikipedia Article claims he disliked the Gooseneck Viewers, yet there's no source too.
I only watched fifteen minutes, but two things immediately jumped out at me.
1. Star Trek would never have shown 23rd century Earth, even on the view screen, as it did at the start of this episode. The Star Trek Guide made that clear:
1. Star Trek would never have shown 23rd century Earth, even on the view screen, as it did at the start of this episode. The Star Trek Guide made that clear:
Is it any different from this scene from "The Cage" and "The Menagerie?"
[Woodland glade]
(A picnic spread on a tartan rug, two horses standing by, a futuristic city in the distance)
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