When the idea came out for ST 4 to be set during the Academy days of our Enterprise crew who, at the time, were the top candidates chosen to portray the younger versions of Kirk and co and who could you have seen play the younger cast?
Harve Bennett has said that the casting for Starfleet Academy would have been Ethan Hawke as Kirk and John Cusack as Spock. I can almost see it, based on Dead Poets Society and Say Anything. Almost. The film would have been shot partly at Washington & Lee University in Lexington, Virginia, which would have been the Academy, and I believe that Paramount actually built a new building on campus for the film. The film actually got fairly close to production. It was really only stopped at the 11th hour when some higher-ups at Paramount realized that there wasn't a role in the film for Shatner and Nimoy. The framing sequence that's been talked about -- Kirk addressing the Academy cadets and reflecting on his lost love -- was a late addition to make the film acceptible to Paramount's new needs.I don't remember it ever getting as far as casting. If there were any names thrown around, it was just among fans and media, nothing official.
I can almost see it, based on Dead Poets Society and Say Anything.
Umm, I'm referring to Hawke's role in Dead Poets and Cusack's role Say Anything, which were released in the 1989/1990 window. Neither were in Paper Chase.The other model was the TV series "Paper Chase".I can almost see it, based on Dead Poets Society and Say Anything.
Y'know, that pisses me off, and it really gives rise to the opinion of the "gang of four" as being douchebags. Yes, I realize they were just trying to protect their careers, but they're also being churlish toward the franchise that gave them careers to start with. That's just dickery.However, Takei, Koenig, Doohan and Nichols (who all realized there wouldn't be big roles for them), managed to get ST convention audiences imagining something comedic, akin to the "Police Academy" films and, with both ST IV and ST V having a lighter tone, people were willing to believe that's what Bennett had in mind.
The original Star Trek 4 was supposed to feature Eddie Murphy with a similar story about the whales. The original idea for Star Trek 6 was the Academy movie.
Y'know, that pisses me off, and it really gives rise to the opinion of the "gang of four" as being douchebags. Yes, I realize they were just trying to protect their careers, but they're also being churlish toward the franchise that gave them careers to start with. That's just dickery.
When the idea came out for ST 4 to be set during the Academy days of our Enterprise crew who, at the time, were the top candidates chosen to portray the younger versions of Kirk and co and who could you have seen play the younger cast?
That was part 6, not 4. Ending on 3 would be silly.
Umm, I'm referring to Hawke's role in Dead Poets and Cusack's role Say Anything, which were released in the 1989/1990 window. Neither were in Paper Chase..
So they were supposed to answer fan queries at conventions, weekend after weekend, by pretending that they were absolutely thrilled their future onscreen work in ST was likely to dry up?Yes, I realize they were just trying to protect their careers, but they're also being churlish toward the franchise that gave them careers to start with. That's just dickery.
I thought the original concept for movie 4 was an epic space battle between humanity and whales, with starships and humpbacks in epic battles, with laser beams shooting out of the whales' eyes, and photon torpedoes being shot from their blow holes?
No, Ian, the problem I have is that they were feeding audiences misinformation about a project they weren't even involved with, and probably had little if any solid idea of what it was about. That's like people citing Richard Arnold at conventions these days as a reliable source -- he's not connected to the franchise any longer, and he's no source of authority any longer.So they were supposed to answer fan queries at conventions, weekend after weekend, by pretending that they were absolutely thrilled their future onscreen work in ST was likely to dry up?
the problem I have is that they were feeding audiences misinformation about a project they weren't even involved with, and probably had little if any solid idea of what it was about.
Well, he's still an annual guest at Australian conventions, continues to be a freelance adviser to ST tie-in licensees, spends a lot of time on the Paramount lot and is in daily/weekly contact with many of the actors, writers and production people. I assume he also has contacts who worked on the new movie. So, yeah, he's still a fairly reliable source of ST news. And his dealer's table and charity auctions still have unique items.That's like people citing Richard Arnold at conventions these days as a reliable source -- he's not connected to the franchise any longer, and he's no source of authority any longer.
Exactly, but that wasn't known at the time I'm talking about. IIRC, the Academy proposal was pitched by Bennett before ST V, and again before ST VI. It was only later that we started to hear it was to be much darker in tone.There's nothing that I have ever heard about Starfleet Academy that makes it sound like it would have been any sort of comedic romp. Bennett, when I've seen him talk about it, has described a somewhat dark film that's about as far away from the hijinks and pratfalls of Police Academy as you can get.
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