To be fair, had he committed any of those offenses at the time?
Yep, his first was in 1973. It wasn't widely known in 1979, of course, but still makes it a little creepy in retrospect.
To be fair, had he committed any of those offenses at the time?
Unlikely at best. Stephen Collins was cast by Robert Wise, not by anyone involved with the planned Phase II series, and Collins said in 2001 interviews promoting the Director's Cut of TMP that it's unlikely that he would've been interested in a regular television role at the time, as he was trying to get his feature film career off the ground. (Obviously, he'd changed his mind by the time Tales of the Gold Monkey rolled around in 1982.)It would've been a worse scenario if Phase II had come to fruition, Stephen Collins had still been cast as Decker, and then if Decker replaced Kirk if William Shatner left the show, which could've happened. That would've ended up tanking an entire series in retrospect.
I'd go with "interesting failure", but okay.The Motion Picture is Star Trek’s imperfect masterpiece.
This is how I feel about it. Subsequent movies are better paced but they have aged less well for me than TMP. I love its scope, the fact that it featured a more diverse crew, with more women and more aliens that most of the other movies. The uniforms would be better if they looked more like uniforms with padded shoulders and collars, and normal boots but I like them overall. The technology is a great mixture of futuristic yet grounded in reality that was cast aside for a flashy visual in some of the subsequent movies.The Motion Picture is Star Trek’s imperfect masterpiece.
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