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TMP: Kirk's Journey to the Ship

Not everything is meant to be experienced in haste. You don't go to a museum and spend 20 seconds looking at each exhibit. TMP is a movie meant for savoring, not rushing through.

Agree. :techman:

I still fondly remember watching this scene as a boy in the movie theater on Friday December 7th 1979. Kirk and Scotty fly around in the travel pod of the newly refit 1701 was awesome to me.
 
Trumball, Probert--they all did a great job.

You never saw that love towards a ship in Star Wars--not really.
 
Some people complained about the long effects scenes, including the Enterprise reveal, even then. It IS too long. It's too long in part because they show too much of the ship through the dock from the outside, and there are shots like the inexplicable slow pass on the hexagonal lighting unit which should have been tossed on the cutting room floor and stomped on. :)

Agreed. It's an over-long scene in a movie consisting of overlong moments.
Length ≠ profundity!

The problem here is one of dramatic tension. The presence of the ship is teased, with glimpses through the dock structure, until finally the big reveal. And then... another four minutes of the ship, no suspense, nothing new revealed. At least with the V'Ger flyover there is a sense of venturing into the unknown, and possible imminent attack, to give some sort of emotional interest.
 
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Some people complained about the long effects scenes, including the Enterprise reveal, even then. It IS too long. It's too long in part because they show too much of the ship through the dock from the outside, and there are shots like the inexplicable slow pass on the hexagonal lighting unit which should have been tossed on the cutting room floor and stomped on. :)

Agreed. It's an over-long scene in a movie consisting of overlong moments.
Length ≠ profundity!

The problem here is one of dramatic tension. The presence of the ship is teased, with glimpses through the dock structure, until finally the big reveal. And then... another four minutes of the ship, no suspense, nothing new revealed. At least with the V'Ger flyover there is a sense of venturing into the unknown, and possible imminent attack, to give some sort of emotional interest.

In the movie theater, on the big screen on December 7th 1979, the newly refit 1701 was for the fan to take in the majesty of this starship. We got to look at her for a little while. I was a boy then and enjoyed every minute. :beer::biggrin: Maybe you have to see it on the big screen to truly appreciate it. Before that moment in '79 the only 1701 we knew was the TOS/TAS design.:)
 
In the movie theater, on the big screen on December 7th 1979, the newly refit 1701 was for the fan to take in the majesty of this starship. We got to look at her for a little while. I was a boy then and enjoyed every minute. :beer::biggrin: Maybe you have to see it on the big screen to truly appreciate it.

I think this is a big part of it, particularly if you'd been waiting years for new Star Trek.
 
In the movie theater, on the big screen on December 7th 1979, the newly refit 1701 was for the fan to take in the majesty of this starship. We got to look at her for a little while. I was a boy then and enjoyed every minute. :beer::biggrin: Maybe you have to see it on the big screen to truly appreciate it.

I think I was impressed the first time I saw it, when I was pretty young. The early ship stuff and V'Ger were like nothing I'd seen before. But at this point in my life spectacle is no longer enough.
 
Way, way back so very many years I had a chance to see TMP at Ontario Place on an IMAX screen.

Talking about really conveying the ship's size. In IMAX the TMP refit was thunderous during the reveal sequence.

Throughout the theatre there was lot of hushed awe accented with expressions of "Holy shit!"

It really took your breath away.
 
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Way, way back so very many years I had a chance to see TMP at Ontario Place on an IMAX screen.

Talking about really conveying the ship's size. In IMAX the TMP refit was thunderous during the reveal sequence.

Throughout the theatre there was lot of hushed awe accented with expressions of "Holy shit!"

It really took your breath away.

Awesome! That must have been intense in IMAX. That it how it felt to me as a young boy in a conventional theater on that Friday December 7 1979.
 
Personally, I'm more bored by The Wrath of Khan than I am by TMP. I find most space battles tedious, and TWOK's space battles are surprisingly sluggish to boot.
I'm not a member of the spaceship admiration society so I really enjoyed TWOK's space battles compared to the woosh woosh of other battles. It has character moments and strategy compared to CGI and models.
Maybe I would have enjoyed the 4 minute journey to the shi in TMP if the graphics were better but I doubt it. It was at least 3 minutes too long. Maybe 3:30. If we saw inside the windows or something it might have been more interesting to me.

Then the endless shots of Vger. Just too much. Just might as well as shone a torch in my eyes. Maybe if you had something to compare it to in shot. Otherwise it was just a bunch of lights.
I liked the Klingon shots and Spock's shuttle. They were interesting and something was happening.
 
Oddly like trying to take in the TOS Enterprise model in the bookstore of the Air and Space Museum on the Mall in DC. Most often, there are too many people around it during tourist season to seriously take it in and study it. This time of year though, a person can go down there and have a real Kirk and Scotty moment with it.

Not anymore, though, since it's been removed for restoration and will be on display elsewhere once it's restored.

This is off topic, but I had read some time back that it was in need of it, largely because it was never built to be displayed as it has been, and its structure was showing the strain.

I can imagine that if it was never intended to be hung, the nacelle pylons would eventually sag under the weight and the nacelles would go seriously out of plumb.

Which means: The engines, they canna take the strain! :p
 
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