Studying all the images available it seems the artist intended the pods to be generally an elongated elipsoid with pods varying in size. Some pods look almost perfectly elipsoid and some look somewhat distorted and more like an egg shape. And some of the pods appear to be a bit flattened on one side. Many of you might think I'm nuts, but I'm reworking this yet again to try to get closer to what we see onscreen even though it's difficult to gauge perspective with this thing and keeping in mind that even things with which we are already well familiar weren't drawn perfectly faithfully with what was seen in TOS. That leaves me some leeway to interpret what I'm seeing.
The other thing I'm considering is how might this ship have been constructed as a live-action miniature during TOS. With this in mind I'm wondering how the method of construction could influence the look of the final product. I am cheating a little by thinking in terms of having sufficient time to do the job reasonably with materiels at hand rather than whatever could be cooked up today with CGI.
The miniature wouldn't have to be all that big to get the right effect to film decently for television of the day. Perhaps one could use somewhat heavy gage wire to form the vines and connect the pods together. Even heavy coathanger wire could serve if the miniature wasn't too big. The pods might be some kind of foam (perhaps prefabricated in roughly the right shapes) or maybe they could be paper mache.
The planet killer from "The Doomsday Machine" is an excellent example of something actually rather simple that manages to look truly alien when lighted and filmed properly. Perhaps this could have ben done with the alien ship from "Beyond The Farthest Star."
The other thing I'm considering is how might this ship have been constructed as a live-action miniature during TOS. With this in mind I'm wondering how the method of construction could influence the look of the final product. I am cheating a little by thinking in terms of having sufficient time to do the job reasonably with materiels at hand rather than whatever could be cooked up today with CGI.
The miniature wouldn't have to be all that big to get the right effect to film decently for television of the day. Perhaps one could use somewhat heavy gage wire to form the vines and connect the pods together. Even heavy coathanger wire could serve if the miniature wasn't too big. The pods might be some kind of foam (perhaps prefabricated in roughly the right shapes) or maybe they could be paper mache.
The planet killer from "The Doomsday Machine" is an excellent example of something actually rather simple that manages to look truly alien when lighted and filmed properly. Perhaps this could have ben done with the alien ship from "Beyond The Farthest Star."
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