I've messaged alchemist...
I want to clarify this because, in my haste, I didn't make the point I wanted to. That is, that there were at least a couple of different workprints made for the pilot and I have a previously assembled version of one of them. My rolls contain some unused and unseen material including some of the deleted portions of the Orion illusion sequence. Other workprint versions may have different content.It's not.
Not a good assumption, and it's not your fault. GR had a print, not a workprint.
Non sequitur, your facts are uncoordinated.But seriously, I have an unassembled workprint of the pilot that has all the originally-filmed material including the deleted portions of the Orion illusion sequence.
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Yep.So for example, those two sleazy dudes in the Orion slave girl sequence sound like their lines are abruptly cut off and the shot suddenly changes. There’s more to these?
So when are we going to the editing bay?![]()
http://startrekhistory.com/cagepage.html Scroll down and read excerpts from the script and images of deleted parts.So for example, those two sleazy dudes in the Orion slave girl sequence sound like their lines are abruptly cut off and the shot suddenly changes. There’s more to these?
^^^I always wondered why guys like Solow and Justman said the pilot was around 90 minutes. I have no idea how much closer a completely restored cut would run to that, but it’s tantalizing to consider
^^^
It was 90 minutes because if it didn't sell as a pilot, they were planing to release it as a one shot film in some theater markets of the time (and they had it in the Leads contracts that they could be asked back to do some re-shoots if that came to pass).
Actually, from what I thought, it was said it was 90 minutes. There are also memos I believe of Roddenberry asking if they can film additional material in order to make a motion picture. So on one hand it was either 90 minutes (Solow’s recollection) and on the they didn’t have enough material to make it a full motion picture.
If it truly was 90 minutes that’s almost 20 minutes of footage missing.
(And I know the pilot was test screened because both my mother and father told me they went to screen a 'free pilot' and it was a version of Star Trek that didn't have James Kirk and a woman was second in Command. They told me the audience roared with laughter when Spock cam on the screen. Many thought the ears and eyebrows looked ridiculous).
Fascinating. And I've never heard the thing about people laughing. But that could be part of the test audience story that Roddenberry would choose not to tell.
Bjo Trimble has said that she went to a science fiction convention in 1966, and a then-unknown Gene Roddenberry screened WNMHGB. The crowd liked it, and then he said something like, "I have another film to show you, but this one's in black and white." And apparently that was his personal copy of "The Cage", the one later used to assemble the hybrid color release. Again no mention of laughter, but that crowd would be more open minded to a sci-fi film.
The con attendees who got in to see that double feature got their money's worth. How great that must have been, to get your first ST experience on a big screen.
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