It probably looked like hell under normal lighting in real life, but as an alien looking device made of very unweildy material (neutronium) it looked great. Everyone I've seen trying to update this thing all ended up looking cartoony.
Tell me about it! Getting the proportions right is achievable if one uses that side shot just as the Constellation explodes as a template, but that strange iridescent surface is nigh impossible to recreate!
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I'm still experimenting with various "shaders", That's why I was so curious whether any "behind the scenes" information about the planet killer miniature existed.
Sincerely,
Bill
A few years ago someone did some research into the original miniature ...
Thank you, I'm old and couldn't read the name
And written by Norman Spinrad, no less.
(This is where I brag about Norman being one of my old writing instructors, who taught me how to write a novel outline.)
our seldom-seen characters. Like Slap-Happy Surgeon Dude...
Amazing reading in These Are The Voyages, Season Two. How Bob Justman literally pleaded with Gene Coon to not produce this episode, and how Coon actually came up with many of the key facets that made it the classic we know and love.
Amazing reading in These Are The Voyages, Season Two. How Bob Justman literally pleaded with Gene Coon to not produce this episode, and how Coon actually came up with many of the key facets that made it the classic we know and love.
Do you mean Justman wanted someone else to produce it, or that he didn't want this ep produced at all? And if the latter, does it say what he had against the script?
People can say what they want, but I still love that rough hewn look of the original planet killer miniature. It probably looked like hell under normal lighting in real life, but as an alien looking device made of very unweildy material (neutronium) it looked great. Everyone I've seen trying to update this thing all ended up looking cartoony.
For me the original still rules.
Okay, since you have the script, how does the script describe the machine when it first appears?
We have Decker's description at Scene 31:
KIRK
(crosses in)
What does it look like, Commodore?
DECKER
A hundred times the size of a
starship... a mile long, with
a maw big enough to swallow a
dozen ships... it destroyes
planets... cuts them to rubble...
********
Then, we have this description at Scene 44:
44 INSERT - MAIN VIEWSCREEN
On the screen, looming large and seen head-on, we see
the Planet-Killer; a great funnel extended before its
huge metallic body as if it were to devour the Enterprise.
SPOCK'S VOICE
An immense body... a large funnel-
mouth... It looks very much like
Commodore Decker's Planet-killer...
And it is pursuing us!
Then we have Scene 52--just as the boarding party is about to beam back to the Enterprise:
52 EXT. SPACE - QUARTERING SHOT OF THE PLANET-KILLER
We see the huge funnel mouth, with a blue-hot LIGHT
EFFECT glowing within. An ATOMIC BEAM EFFECT (a
solid beam of blue light) that seems to come from
within the funnel lances out.
Later, at Scene 85:
85 EXT. SPACE - CLOSE ON THE PLANET-KILLER
We see just the huge funnel, from the side. Then,
dwarfed by the funnel, the Enterprise moves into the
FRAME.
There are other Planet-Killer related scenes--like when Decker takes the shuttlecraft down its maw, and when the Constellation meets the same fate. All the descriptions are the same (and no more informative) than the above scenes.
If Mr. Spinrad had something else in mind other than what was scripted, he didn't so indicate--or he indicated it only in earlier drafts of the script. As I read what little is in this script, it seems like what was created is pretty consistent with what was requested.
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