I don't think this is entirely fair, as it seems to belittle the bulk of Wise's career as director, beginning in the 1940s.Plus Robert Wise had his biggest successes as a director of musicals, so he was comfortable with that kind of thing.
Huh? It's just a fact. The Sound of Music was, by far, the most financially successful film of the 1960s. It ranks as the third highest-grossing movie box office of all time in adjusted dollars. West Side Story was the biggest hit of 1961, had wide critical acclaim and won ten Academy Awards. Both were awarded Best Picture, and got Wise his two directing Oscars.
And as an artist, I'm just blown away at how the ENTERPRISE model is quite simply, a work of art. The Art Deco influences are very pronounced and appropriate. The amount of detail and that pearlescent finish to enhance the "self-lighting" is impressive. Later ENTERPRISE designs seemed more concerned with faux-engineering and they never really had that kind of artistry in mind.
Agreed. And that model is unlike a lot of movie spaceship designs because it looks interesting from so many different angles. For some reason, the shots from below aft, looking at the bottom of the shuttle bay counter stern with the graceful sweep of the nacelle pylons above and the saucer more distant, always gave the ship the most "physical presence" for me.
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