Shatmandu said:
When the technology gets cheap enough, I'll cut the fucker down to an hour and have a servicable episode.
Cheap enough? There are free tools to re-edit video?
Shatmandu said:
When the technology gets cheap enough, I'll cut the fucker down to an hour and have a servicable episode.
That pic is AWESOME! Why weren't there fixes like that in the DE?DS9Sega said:
trevanian said:
If they had just gone for the Probert view on the DE, they'd have had an aesthetically pleasing twin nacelle view, instead of that sore thumb nacelle.
Something that could have looked vaguely like this, had someone been desperate enough to rotomatte a million frames:
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Kinnison said:
Therin of Andor said:
ancient said:
You can fing the DE new on VHS for about $1 in video stores that still have stocks of VHS.
The "Director's Edition" found on double DVD sets has never been released on VHS.
That's not true. I definately owned a copy. I bought it as soon as it came out, and I recall commenting on this very BBS that I was glad that the resolution was so bad that I couldn't distinguish the poorly-done CGI effects from the beautiful model work.
I seem to recall, from those days, that the new material was only rendered in NTSC-standard resolution. With the inevitable upgrade to HD and Blue Ray and all those fancy new video standards, the TMP DE will become obsolete. I can't say that's a bad thing. While I prefer the newer edit, some of the other choices made were rather poor. Aridas's description of that matte painting a couple of pages back almost made me cry!
Christopher said:
The spaceship miniatures in TMP were the best, most sophisticated and detailed spaceship miniatures ever built at the time. And they were utterly gorgeous. The miniature effects were extraordinary for their time and hold up superbly today.
Despite its various flaws, this movie had a sense of wonder and scale the other nine films to date didn't.
aridas sofia said:
I wish the DE had done the job it should have, of reinforcing that magic, instead of rewriting it as something more pedestrian. From the revisualizing of San Francisco as just another uber-metropolis, to the mistreatment of V'ger, to the miniaturization of its cloud, it was anything but the fulfillment of its makers' ideas. It might have been the fulfillment of Wise's ideas, but you can be sure that it would have been different had Roddenberry been alive and involved. The fact it was his vision, strenuously fought for, makes his absence from the creation of this supposed "definitive" version all the more wrong.
Therin of Andor said:
aridas sofia said:
I wish the DE had done the job it should have, of reinforcing that magic, instead of rewriting it as something more pedestrian. From the revisualizing of San Francisco as just another uber-metropolis, to the mistreatment of V'ger, to the miniaturization of its cloud, it was anything but the fulfillment of its makers' ideas. It might have been the fulfillment of Wise's ideas, but you can be sure that it would have been different had Roddenberry been alive and involved. The fact it was his vision, strenuously fought for, makes his absence from the creation of this supposed "definitive" version all the more wrong.
Huh?
I really cannot see that the additions made to TMPE take anything away from Roddenberry's "vision". You've been listening to The God Thing too much.
I didn't mind the San Francisco scenes in 1979 (I'd have preferred a few more panning closeups of alien ambassadors), but I used to hear lots of complaints about the hasty matte paintings and the place-holder emblem on the floor.
82 AUs for the cloud's diameter sounds mighty big to a novice, but 2 AUs is still a bloody enormous cloud, and should be big enough to satisfy any astronomers in the audience who know how big just 1 AU is.
It's a very good mix. I had the opportunity to hear it at a recent screening at the Fine Arts Theater in Beverly Hills, CA and it sounded fantastic. I was told after the screening that it sounded as good as it did on the dub stage. It was quite an experience.RyanKCR said:
There was an awe feeling about the movie that the new sound effects destroyed. Instead of a serious Sci-Fi thought provoking movie now we get serious dialoge and imagry coupled with b-rated sound mix that sounds like a film student was doing for his first movie.
RyanKCR said:
There was an awe feeling about the movie that the new sound effects destroyed.
Therin of Andor said:
Huh?
I really cannot see that the additions made to TMPE take anything away from Roddenberry's "vision". You've been listening to The God Thing too much.
aridas sofia said:
It is rich in speculation on the future of humanity, with its Paolo Soleri-esque arcologies that afford the restoration of so much of the natural landscape and waterfront, and GR-directed speculations built upon the work of artists as diverse as Hieronymus Bosch, Walter Dorwin Teague, and Arthur F. Mathews, among others.
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