The 05 version did not look cheap, but it did look dated and in the incorrect art style. It simply did not fit, this is not an opinion, its simply a design fact. It was still in the "Atomic age" style with simplistic shapes and not in the Trek Art style. It simply does not work, if I show that to non trek fans( And gods have I) every single one pics the Connie as the older of the two and to quote one of my gaming group ( Goofy AF)
Now goofy is an opinion, I will admit that. But Pointing out it is the more primitive design wise and in a clashing and dated art style is simply the truth.
This is the very same design style as TOS. It is not the same design, nor the same layout and this design is very simple, but it is the very same design style. It is simply what was trending in the 1960's for sci-fi. You even see it in Art and Toys. This is the Space Age/Atomic Age style
The first of the two is from DS9's tribute episode "Trouble and tribble-ations", and the second looks like a promo for ENT's mirror episode, "In a Mirror, Darkly" but is not from the episode itself.
Thanks
We are not talking fluff, we are talking look and design and the NX is simply far more modern then the 1960's TOS ship.
Meh. Saucer, nacelles, pylons, secondary tube-like hull, deflector dish...close enough for me (though not as aesthetically pleasing as either what DSC did use, or other variations I've seen around here and elsewhere). To the casual viewer...it's the Enterprise.I guess it could have been worse.
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Your point being this....Thank you for proving my point for me.
Which is untrue since we have seen the TOS design in other series.Star trek has not looked like TOS in well over 40 years. You are making a false argument here.
It's easy to understand why no one remembers (or wants to remember) that episode.The second one is from 'These Are the Voyages'
I found a pretty good blog post describing the changes made to the Star Destroyer for Rogue One. The gist of it is that the Star Destroyer, while not identical to the original, is actually closer to it than the larger, more detailed model made for ESB was. The most obvious difference from the original model is that it now has lighted windows.
That said, I think an Enterprise as unchanged as the ISDs in Rogue One would be more than a little out of place in Discovery.
and also this...
There are similar variations among X-Wings, Y-Wings, and the Falcon, between both different miniatures and the miniatures versus their full-scale versions, but the trailer isn’t clear enough and I’m not enough of an expert to distinguish between them at a glance.
IOW, even an extremely dedicated SW fan who works professionally as a digital 3D modeler can't necessarily tell the difference between SW ship versions... in contrast to DSC's new version of Enterprise, which is obviously different at a glance.
I kind of agree, except that this blogger seems to be analyzing the trailer and not the film, where more of those details are available.
Among the many changes to the ISD's design includes:
5) Slightly redesigned hangar bay complete with Tie fighter launch racks, none of which had even been conceived in ANH.
It actually seems to me that if you painted the discovery version bluish-white and and made it the same COLOR as the TOS version, the differences would be considerably less obvious (much as the difference between the original Star Destroyer and the Empire Strikes Back version are completely lost on 99% of the people who watch Star Wars).
True to the casual viewer anything that looks vaguely like this is the EnterpriseMeh. Saucer, nacelles, pylons, secondary tube-like hull, deflector dish...close enough for me (though not as aesthetically pleasing as either what DSC did use, or other variations I've seen around here and elsewhere). To the casual viewer...it's the Enterprise.
Still looks older than the TOS Enterprise and far more primitive.I'll give it a shot. But you must look at it objectively and not as a fan.
I agree with Doug on this one.Doug Drexler himself said that the TOS Enterprise looks more advanced in his eyes than the NX-01 and says that he can see Starfleet shipbuilding technology and design aesthetics evolving between the times of Archer and Kirk to reflect an ethos of maximum effect with minimal indication.
We are not talking fluff, we are talking look and design and the NX is simply far more modern then the 1960's TOS ship.
I agree with @Serveaux on this one. The NX simply looks more primitive.It is definitely not.
Where on earth did that come from, anyway?I guess it could have been worse.
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At the end of the day, I'm satisfied with Discovery's interpretation of the Enterprise/Connie, but I think if they left it untouched it would have been fine too.These are pics of the 11 footer before it received it's restoration inserted into the movies. I think it looks great. Picture credits goes to Nick Acosta.
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Yeah, I completely agree. It changes the profile of the ship considerably.The more I think about it, the more I'm sure that my biggest issues with the DSC are reducing the height of the ship and giving it the TMP nacelle pylons. Those straight pylons, while admittedly a bit ugly and simplistic, are what make the TOS ship the TOS ship. It's how you can tell it apart from the movie version even when it's shrunk down to a handful of pixels across. More than the satellite dish or the nacelle caps, I think that ‾‾|_/‾‾ arrangement is the TOS ship on a fundamental level.
Huh. Interesting site. I poked around a little and was intrigued to discover his post showing that there is absolutely no conceivable way the interior sets for the Millennium Falcon could fit inside the dimensions of the exterior prop. (The Correllian shipyards must've borrowed some tech from the folks who built the TOS shuttlecraft!...Aw, you're a pal. In fact, the far-more-dedicated SW fan Stinson Lenz did eventually observe some very subtle changes in the X-Wing's shape for Rogue One (never minding extra detailing around the engines and such)...
Well, you never know who you'll encounter on TrekBBS. This time I really did have no idea.This is karma because I said that thing the other day about not being sure if people knew who Dennis was, isn't it? Yes, it is I, the person whose blog that is. I've been in the thread the whole time.
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