I keep expecting someone on the Enterprise to go, REALLY ANOTHER LOST PROBE??!!
At the Sydney gala celebrity premiere night of ST IV, 100 of us in Star Trek costumes all said, in unison, "ANOTHER LOST PROBE??!!"
I keep expecting someone on the Enterprise to go, REALLY ANOTHER LOST PROBE??!!
I saw TMP on its opening weekend, and this after years of pent up anticipation and reading everything I could get my hands on regarding the film. In December '79 I was 20 years old.
In many respects I was blown away by it. This was Star Trek treated with the respect many of us felt it rarely got. It was done as science fiction and eschewed any caricatured silliness. Seeing the refit Enterprise up there on the big screen was amazing. And I remember the audience applauding and cheering aloud when Kirk first appeared onscreen. Then a hushed silence of awe as the refit Enterprise was revealed. The opening scene of the Klingon battlecruisers encountering V'ger was stunning.
The only f/x gaff that immediately stood out to me then was when the crew exit onto the ship's hull to meet V'ger. I could see right off that it didn't look right, the scale and perspective were all wrong.
All that said I had some small reservations in that I would like to have seen more character drama. But all told I thought it was a good start. Later I was disappointed to hear so much harsh criticism of the film. Three years later TWOK did indeed give us more energy and character drama, but I also noted a lot of things changed that I was disappointed with.
After seeing TMP two or three times in theatre I didn't see it again for quite a long time, and my memory of it was partly affected by much of the negative commentary I heard repeated (and still do). I finally saw it again (well the extended version) on VHS some years later and I was again reminded of how much I liked about the film and what little I was disappointed with.
Then the DE version came along and I felt this was the version we should have gotten back in '79. It worked much better particularly in terms of pacing. We now had something that was almost there, but you can't remaster character drama into an old film and restore scenes never shot...well, not yet anyway.
And now TMP remains my favourite Trek film. Even with its flaws it harkens back to "The Cage" and the Star Trek of TOS' first season. It's Star Trek as unapologetic science fiction. And it has aged better than all the others.
And just as TOS is visually distinctive from all the later series I love how TMP is also visually distinctive from all the following films.
I usually find those people complaining about TMP being "the most boringest" are usually like Plinkett says - aged around thirteen with the attention spans of mosquitoes...Most thinking adults really like it.
Nope, sorry. I was an adult when it premiered - which in fact may have been one reason I was underwhelmed by it.
That is, assuming that your intent was to so characterize adults who find the movie boring - your attempted mockery of those people by using the phrase "the most boringest" is a failed parody which renders your intent there somewhat muddled.
"Most thinking adults," BTW, have never sat through this or any Trek movie - period. So even if you could offer some evidence that you represent "most thinking Trek fans" in some sense superior to those who dislike the film - and you can't - your observation fails as a simplistic and thoughtless overgeneralization.
The chances, or odds of such a possibility happening are the following.
Slim and none.
Cat in a blender sounds about right."Maybe eventually JJ can remake ST:TMP with some plot, color and lens flares." - Dennis
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If JJ would have made STTMP, the Enterprise flyover would have lasted about 5 seconds. The shuttle bay would be a white, blinding light obscuring all detail. The camera would be shaken so badly that you wouldn't be sure if you just saw the Enterprise, or a cat in a blender.
When you refer to the gong, I assume you are referring to the very deep sound. That was actually a very large wire. When seen in the theatres, this sound was like nothing ever heard before (or since, really).
It would almost rumble the theatre seats. I think that is missed when watched in the home. It was something that was used to bring something strange and different to the theatre audience and it was very effective. I recently bought a surround sound system with a subwoofer, maybe I'll watch it again to see if it has the same effect at home now.
I love the Director's Edition so much more than the original. I don't even watch the original anymore. The so-called character moments that were edited out needed to be edited out. Lines like Decker's stated that man creates God in his own image are just terrible. They needed to be cut.
Some of the added scenes that were in the extended edition were nothing but scenes that were edited out of the movie because they weren't very good. They were added on so that Paramount could sell more video tapes with "never before seen footage"
The Director's Edition IS what Wise would have originally done had he had the time. He said so himself.
I'd like to see the extended tv version with the completed effects from the DE. I will admit reducing the amount of time the camera spent focused on the charcters' furrowed brows was probably a good idea but apart from that, I rather enjoy the longer version.
I'd like to see the extended tv version with the completed effects from the DE. I will admit reducing the amount of time the camera spent focused on the charcters' furrowed brows was probably a good idea but apart from that, I rather enjoy the longer version.
Good idea. But you'd have to lose Kirk's 'memory-wall' exit from the ship.
"Maybe eventually JJ can remake ST:TMP with some plot, color and lens flares." - Dennis
...The camera would be shaken so badly that you wouldn't be sure if you just saw the Enterprise, or a cat in a blender.
I'm still waiting on those pics of the wide-bottomed officer.
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