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The original Excelsior bridge...

You don't need railings with those huge chair arms holding you in.

What if the ship was hit by a plasma storm when you were standing away from your seat? What would you grab a hold of? The railings. We saw it many times in TOS. Its a safety measure and a welcome aesthetic feature of nearly all starfleet bridges.
 
But why does Lora/Shane remember it differently, then? That seems like an odd thing to misremember. Maybe the entire bridge was redone after Johnson's visit in anticipation of future movies?
Not sure. In the Mr. Scott's Guide thread going on over in Trek Tech, Lora says her visit to the sets was in August 1986, which was three months after shooting wrapped, and long before the sets would have been redressed for TNG, which began filming at the end of May 1987. But between the Gene/Majel photo and some angles on the bridge in a Good Morning America interview with Kelley, Doohan, Takei, Nichols, and Koenig to publicize TVH, it's pretty clear that at the very least, everything got a fresh coat of paint.
 
The only real problem I have with the original Excelsior bridge is those huge lettered signs right next to the turbolift denoting ship's status. Surely it'd be more efficient to just use lighting?

excelsior_status_display_zpsbxovurue.jpg


OK, I get "Red Alert", "Yellow Alert" and "Normal". Not entirely sure about "Auxiliary", but maybe it's for situations like when Enterprise returned to Spacedock earlier in the movie, and Spacedock actually took control of Enterprise's systems for the docking procedure.

But "Stand By"? What does the crew do, just cease all operations and sit there expectantly? :lol:
 
maybe...
"Stand By" means ship is in spacedock/starbase stand down with minimum crew on board:shifty:
"Auxiliary" means ship is running on backup power and damaged ;)
 
I liked the "GOOD MORNING CAPTAIN" display once Excelsior had been sabotaged and its computer lobotomized. Big, blocky letters, like you'd see on a TRS-80 or VIC-20 back in the early 1980s.
 
I liked the "GOOD MORNING CAPTAIN" display once Excelsior had been sabotaged and its computer lobotomized. Big, blocky letters, like you'd see on a TRS-80 or VIC-20 back in the early 1980s.
They should have used a font for the letters that did not look like '80s computers. Same problem when they auto-destructed the 1701-Refit on the computer screen there. :brickwall:
 
They should have used a font for the letters that did not look like '80s computers. Same problem when they auto-destructed the 1701-Refit on the computer screen there. :brickwall:

But time and cost is a factor. Creating something new would've taken time and cost money.
 
They should have used a font for the letters that did not look like '80s computers. Same problem when they auto-destructed the 1701-Refit on the computer screen there. :brickwall:
A reason that I liked it was that this was supposed to be the zillion-dollar-system reverting to its most basic operating system functions-- sort of like HAL 9000 singing that old song. This is the cold start boot!
 
For the opening scenes of Trek IV, they did have a nice transparent screen with exotic-looking typeface on Spock's computer.
It still brought up the letters one at a time and with sound effects, as movie computers often do!
 
It wasn't Star Trek V.

Love this bridge, by the way.

enterprise_bridge1.jpg
enterprise_bridge2.jpg


The best version ever used in a movie - prior to 2009, anyway.

I personally like the TUC version better myself. I think the original TSFS version had some interesting ideas that could be executed better, and the idea of a temporary bridge is interesting.

Yeah...i hated it. Meyer ruined it aping Red October.
 
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excelsior_status_display_zpsbxovurue.jpg


OK, I get "Red Alert", "Yellow Alert" and "Normal". Not entirely sure about "Auxiliary", but maybe it's for situations like when Enterprise returned to Spacedock earlier in the movie, and Spacedock actually took control of Enterprise's systems for the docking procedure.

But "Stand By"? What does the crew do, just cease all operations and sit there expectantly? :lol:

And what does it mean when none of them are lit like the picture shows? :wtf:
 
But it was from an 80s computer... 2280s, that is. Check out the pinnacle of late 23rd century home computing

Not exactly surprising, since it's obvious Kirk likes to collect antiques. They're all over his apartment. The computer is just one of those antiques that he collected - it doesn't just look like an 80's computer, it IS one.
 
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