I *finally* saw TAS completely last year after many, many, many, MANY years imagining what it was like.
It was very cool, but I was let down by Counter Clock Incident. I always knew this was the only apperance of Robert April and I had it built up in my head, but still nice to see.
I was mostly disappointed in the "sequels" to Mudd, Shore Leave, and Tribbles.
Aside from Yesteryear, I loved Beyond the Farthest Star.
I kinda need to watch them again now that I know what to expect in terms of animation and music.
At one point several (or more) years ago, prior to NuTrek, I was Googling about the Animated Series, and I came across a web site about a new Star Trek animated series. From the pictures on the site, the animation was similar to that used for TAS. I was excited about the look of it. It was going to be set in TAS times, but it was going to focus on the adventures of a different ship and crew, a Constitution-class sister ship to the Enterprise. I was really into it, but I've never heard anything more about it. I suspect the arrival of NuTrek might have killed it. At any rate, I can't find it by Googling anymore. Anyone know anything about this?
At one point several (or more) years ago, prior to NuTrek, I was Googling about the Animated Series, and I came across a web site about a new Star Trek animated series. From the pictures on the site, the animation was similar to that used for TAS. I was excited about the look of it. It was going to be set in TAS times, but it was going to focus on the adventures of a different ship and crew, a Constitution-class sister ship to the Enterprise. I was really into it, but I've never heard anything more about it. I suspect the arrival of NuTrek might have killed it. At any rate, I can't find it by Googling anymore. Anyone know anything about this?
Is this what you are talking about? The style is much different than the original and it was intended for the web so it may not be.
http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/Star_Trek:_Final_Frontier
At one point several (or more) years ago, prior to NuTrek, I was Googling about the Animated Series, and I came across a web site about a new Star Trek animated series. From the pictures on the site, the animation was similar to that used for TAS. I was excited about the look of it. It was going to be set in TAS times, but it was going to focus on the adventures of a different ship and crew, a Constitution-class sister ship to the Enterprise. I was really into it, but I've never heard anything more about it. I suspect the arrival of NuTrek might have killed it. At any rate, I can't find it by Googling anymore. Anyone know anything about this?
At one point several (or more) years ago, prior to NuTrek, I was Googling about the Animated Series, and I came across a web site about a new Star Trek animated series. From the pictures on the site, the animation was similar to that used for TAS. I was excited about the look of it. It was going to be set in TAS times, but it was going to focus on the adventures of a different ship and crew, a Constitution-class sister ship to the Enterprise. I was really into it, but I've never heard anything more about it. I suspect the arrival of NuTrek might have killed it. At any rate, I can't find it by Googling anymore. Anyone know anything about this?
Is this what you are talking about? The style is much different than the original and it was intended for the web so it may not be.
http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/Star_Trek:_Final_Frontier
At one point several (or more) years ago, prior to NuTrek, I was Googling about the Animated Series, and I came across a web site about a new Star Trek animated series. From the pictures on the site, the animation was similar to that used for TAS. I was excited about the look of it. It was going to be set in TAS times, but it was going to focus on the adventures of a different ship and crew, a Constitution-class sister ship to the Enterprise. I was really into it, but I've never heard anything more about it. I suspect the arrival of NuTrek might have killed it. At any rate, I can't find it by Googling anymore. Anyone know anything about this?
Perhaps this fan-made effort? http://www.startrekanimated.com/tas_farragut.html
Hello I have been lurking on this site for a while now. I joined today just to comment on this quote. Yes, this is a wonderful idea. I have been thinking about this for quite a while now. A live action version of TAS. Expand them to an hour in length and have them ready for the 50th anniversary in 2016. I also would have them do live action versions of the computer games from the 1990s, 25th anniversary edition, Judgment Rites and the unreleased Secret of Vulcan Fury. The final two seasons/years of the original 5 year mission just in time for the big anniversary in 2016.TAS has some of the best storylines. It stands to reason as they were no longer limited by budget constraints so they could really get imaginative with setting and character.
This has got me to thinking. Seeing as reboots have been and continue to be all of the rage, wouldn't it be nice to bring back TAS but as a live action series?
I'm normally not a CGI fan, but I could see it working well for this.
But He-Man had a completely distinct, electronic score provided by Shuki Levy, Haim Saban, and Lou Scheimer (under the pseudonym Erika Lane). Not a single note of Ellis and Prescott's music was ever used in He-Man.
That is not a technical classification of "stock music." Riddle, May and others composed themes for the Batman ('66) TV series, which in turn, ended up repeatedly used throughout the 120 episodes, but no one classifies that as "stock music," (even within the series) as the music--when first composed--was designed to fit specific scenes, characters, etc., in equally specific episodes.The way Filmation worked -- the way most cartoons at the time worked -- was that a library of stock cues was created for each show at the beginning and tracked in all its episodes. So yes, the TAS cues were stock from the beginning, in that they were not written for specific scenes in specific episodes, but just as general cues to fit particular moods and tones
TAS is part of the five year mission that takes place after TOS and before the events of TMP. So, yes TAS has always been important to me ever since I watched it first-run as a very young boy in '73-'74 along with reruns of TOS.
There's a huge nostalgia factor in TAS for me that still carries over to today. I was already hooked on Star Trek by TOS when TAS came out, but I'd seen only some of TOS, and TOS was airing very irregularly at the time. I was brought deeper into Star Trek by TAS.
If I were to rank all episodes of Star Trek, the best and the worst would not be TAS episodes. Many, such as "Beyond the Farthest Star," "Yesteryear," "One of Our Planets Is Missing," "The Time Trap," and "The Slaver Weapon," would be nowhere near the bottom.
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