That being said, I think they can reconcile the animated April’s appearances as a different visual representation, and keep the content of The Counter-Clock Incident in continuity.
Or, just say fuck it and get the best actor possible.
That being said, I think they can reconcile the animated April’s appearances as a different visual representation, and keep the content of The Counter-Clock Incident in continuity.
You'd have to discard what we were shown in TAS, which seems to be fully canon these days.
I know he's a huge Trekkie, but was there any actual truth to the possibility of him playing Cochrane in ST:FC (and couildn't actually do it because of his work on That Thing You Do)? Or was that just an urban legend?
I recall Tom Hanks being on a talk show (I forget which one) a few years ago where they asked him how he felt about turning down First Contact, to which he denied ever being asked about it, and was subsequently surprised to see it pointed out on his IMDB page.Since you asked I looked it up. Ron Moore says he was on the wishlist but it never got further than that. So he wasn't approached, so there was never the opportunity for a schedule conflict.
^ Thought so.
As for Eddie Murphy, my understanding is that it was Paramount itself which nixed the possibility of him appearing in ST IV, in order for him to do The Golden Child instead. I suppose this could also be an unfounded rumor, though.
IIRC, Murphy would have played a college professor who is in attendance at the Super Bowl and sees the Bounty decloak. He's the only one who thinks it's real and not a halftime special effect.
If this is true, it was probably a blink-and-you'll-miss-it cameo which wouldn't have been all that important to the story. I couldn't blame him for turning down a small role like that.
I assumed Murphy turned it down because the notion of having him in a starring role in a Star Trek film was just a dumb idea
I was under the impression that the role wasn’t a cameo but basically the same role as Gillian Taylor, only Murphy would have been an astrophysicist and obviously not a love interest for Kirk. I assumed Murphy turned it down because the notion of having him in a starring role in a Star Trek film was just a dumb idea, not to mention that he would have overshadowed the rest of the cast.
Unlikely. Murphy IS a Trek fan, I'm fairly sure of that.
Do you really need the reminder that the only thing consistent with Klingon appearance is that it's been inconsistent since ST:TMP?
![]()
And for further reference Klingons in the SNW era should look like this (if you want 'visual consistency' - but yeah, that ship sailed the back in 1979 with ST:TMP):
![]()
And if anything, the Klingon makeup in that tweet is more akin to the Klingon look in STVi:TUC.
Is it to late to request Idris Elba as April?
It's never too late to request Idris Elba for anything.
Sure, you could cast anyone of any background as Robert April.
Which is why I always dismissed that old IMDB story about Trek XI originally starting off with the destruction of a TV series-era Enterprise 1701 with Robert April in command. If they were seriously considering using April, why didn't they just have him in command of the Kelvin and still cast Faran Tahir to play him?
You're definitely remembering correctly. I can't speak as clearly to Buck Rogers, but the pilot episodes of BSG (collectively entitled "Saga of a Star World") were edited together for a limited theatrical release. I remember seeing the movie in the little theater next to George Mason University in Northern Virginia - it was the only place I could find showing it back then, to my recollection. It had several different scene versions, including the part where the Imperious Leader has Baltar beheaded, as opposed to staying the Centurion's blade in the series, after which they introduced Lucifer as his new handler. IIRC, that was the only showing of episodes in a theater.
Several other notable re-edit telemovies were made, such as "Living Legend", assembled from both Pegasus/Cain episodes of the same name, "Mission: Galactica, The Cylon Attack", also taking bits from "Living Legend" and "Fire in Space" scenes and "Experiment in Terra", which is a HUGE tapestry of pieced together parts of "Saga of a Star World", "The Magnificent Warriors", "Fire in Space", "Experiment in Terra", and Galactica 1980's "The Super Scouts, Part I" and "The Return of Starbuck". The beginning act also has scenes spliced from "The Living Legend, Part I", in terms of closeups of the Pegasus. It also had a new scene of Earth Astronauts finding the Galactica's logbook floating in space, showing new footage of original reptilian Cylons:
![]()
The Battlestar Wiki has a list of all of them, including all the episodes that were used to build them. There were quite a few.
Glen Larson must have loved doing those things and so did Universal. Very little effort to make something ostensibly new. Much like an Eaglemoss model repaint.It would stand to reason that they did it for Buck Rogers as well.
TAS?.
What was his response? Generally I don't do Twitter as much as possible.Anson's take on the Oscars Will Smith thing.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.