Maybe it's the disturbing sense today that nothing has any real meaning or value and everything is replaceable.
Sure it does. Why would you recreate, over and over again, a shot of the Enterprise flying through space when you already have a shot that will work just fine? Better to save that money and time for the one-off effects or for something else in the budget. If you are a producer or art director, you might even think that was being clever.^But it doesn't follow to conclude that the FX artists would choose to recycle an old element if they had the budget and time to create something new.
Well that kind of rhetoric is never helpful to a discussion. It is not slavish devotion to call bad bad and good good. The original stuff has major processing issues, as you have pointed out, but the part of me that is a photographer recognizes excellent visual arts techniques in the FX that they created. (The Enterprise herself seems designed to take advantage of the rule of thirds in the 4:3 format.)I'm not trying to dismiss the value of the original effects; I'm merely pointing out that there are flaws in the assumption that the FX artists would have the same kind of slavish loyalty to the existing shots that some purist fans do.
Hmm that brush is painted rather broadly don't you think? As someone who dabbles in the creative process, I can tell you that resentment and indignation are as equally likely as thumbs-up happiness...That's just misunderstanding how creators view their work. Nobody is a harsher critic of a given creation than the person who created it. So it just doesn't make sense to assume that the FX artists who created a shot -- let alone the editors who had to settle for reusing a previously created shot -- would be outraged to see it updated or replaced with something true to its intent but more advanced in technique. They might feel envy that they didn't have those techniques or budget available to them at the time, but they wouldn't resent the change. After all, their job was to make the show look as good as it could. So why would they begrudge an effort to make it look even better?
And it still wouldn't have looked like 21st century cgi.Maybe it's the disturbing sense today that nothing has any real meaning or value and everything is replaceable.
Even you my friend..even me...
I'm sure if the budget was provided to make more than 1 type of Federation Ship..Matt Jefferies would've jumped at the chance...but Star Trek was mostly on a shoestring budget even if you adjust for inflation... Lost in Space had MUCH more money per episode and provided MANY different ships both from Earth and from other planets...
I'm sure that if Paramount had ponied up the same amount of money per episode that Fox did for LIS.. the near requirement of redoing the special effects for HDTV release wouldn't have been so dire..
I'm injecting personal feelings into this, I suppose. As a graphic artist in a corporate art department, I'm supposed to be cranking out diagrams, illustrations and charts as part of the "graphics team." There have been a couple of occasions when something I've drawn didn't measure up to what the boss wanted, and she gave one of the other artists a crack at it, ultimately using his piece. I know I'm supposed to shrug and go about my business as part of the team, but (as I'm sure you know), we artists sometimes feel kinda possessive about our work. If it's something I put some heart into, something I thought was fine, you bet I'm going to feel a little slighted that I was replaced. This is the presumed feelings I'm projecting onto the old effects crew and model makers.
Sure it does. Why would you recreate, over and over again, a shot of the Enterprise flying through space when you already have a shot that will work just fine? Better to save that money and time for the one-off effects or for something else in the budget.^But it doesn't follow to conclude that the FX artists would choose to recycle an old element if they had the budget and time to create something new.
Well that kind of rhetoric is never helpful to a discussion. It is not slavish devotion to call bad bad and good good.
And it is not purist to prefer the shot that you think best serves the storytelling.
Hmm that brush is painted rather broadly don't you think? As someone who dabbles in the creative process, I can tell you that resentment and indignation are as equally likely as thumbs-up happiness...
I don't think this is the same as colorizing B&W films. The only thing that's changed visually are some of the visual effects. Everything else is exactly the same as shot in the 60s.
Both versions are available and the people responsible for the new FX fought to have both versions available. I think people are getting all freaked out over nothing.
I'm sure that if Paramount had ponied up the same amount of money per episode that Fox did for LIS.. the near requirement of redoing the special effects for HDTV release wouldn't have been so dire..
It sounds more like a youtube fan experiment than something that would be released through official channels
Nineteen pages of this and not one person has explained why the new FX are even an issue at all when the original FX are still there on the blu-ray release.
Nineteen pages of this and not one person has explained why the new FX are even an issue at all when the original FX are still there on the blu-ray release.
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