I watched it with my family when I was 3-4 years old. From that standpoint it was a family show.
I watched it with my family when I was 3-4 years old. From that standpoint it was a family show.
Was it a family show? Depends on how you define it. But I think it was trying to get the TOS demographic, so it might not have wanted to go too far.
Gene Roddenberry was insistent that TMP had to be suitable for families, since a decade of TOS prime time reruns had amassed an audience that included the young children of all those university students who used to watch TOS together, in first-run, in their dorm rooms.
I think a lot of kids would find it incredibly slow and boring, especially compared to the (at the time) recent Star Wars...Gene Roddenberry was insistent that TMP had to be suitable for families, since a decade of TOS prime time reruns had amassed an audience that included the young children of all those university students who used to watch TOS together, in first-run, in their dorm rooms.
I discovered Star Trek when I was 5 years old, but I recognize that it was not aimed at 5-year-olds. It was expressly intended by Gene Roddenberry as the first adult non-anthology science fiction series, a deliberate contrast to kid-oriented sci-fi like Lost in Space, and aspiring to the maturity of the most acclaimed adult dramas of the day; the series bible specifically cited Gunsmoke and Naked City as exemplars for how to write the show.
A family show doesn't need to be child oriented though. Something as simple as not showing a lot of sexual content and not swearing every other word could constitute as a family show. I feel like people conflate family show with kids show but those are two different things.
Yeah, but by 1960s standards, TOS's level of adult content was comparable to that. I mean, you could barely get away with showing a woman's navel back then, but TOS's costuming pushed the limits of how much of a woman's body you could show on camera. And TOS had to fight the censors to get away with saying "Let's get the hell out of here." It was a much stricter time, which is why people in later decades have seen TOS as more suitable for kids than it would have been perceived to be in its first run.
Similarly, TNG's first season definitely tried to be as sexy as it could get away with and pushed the limits of allowable violence with "Conspiracy." Later seasons mostly dialed it down, but season 1 was definitely trying to be adult.
Don't forget "The Naked Now", where the Enterprise hosts a giant flying orgy.Yeah I agree with you there. The first episode I remember watching was Qpid which was probably in the most family friendly season of TNG so that's my perspective. When I went back and finally watched Season 1, I was shocked on how "risque" it was, with episodes like Justice, Angel 1, and Conspiracy.
I think a lot of kids would find it incredibly slow and boring, especially compared to the (at the time) recent Star Wars...
And yet, families did watch TOS reruns together, and many of that generation became TNG's fanbase. I wonder if the "boring vs action", "ST vs SW" split applies more to general audiences?
Stylistically, TMP (at least the first theatrically released version) was a strange beast. It wanted to combine the cerebral nature of some of the science fiction cinema of the early 70s with the spectacular nature of the blockbusters of the second half, such as Star Wars or Close Encounters of the Third Kind.Skipper was talking about The Motion Picture specifically, not TOS. I know that a great many TOS fans found TMP boring, dubbing it "The Motionless Picture."
Stylistically, TMP (at least the first theatrically released version) was a strange beast. It wanted to combine the cerebral nature of some of the science fiction cinema of the early 70s with the spectacular nature of the blockbusters of the second half, such as Star Wars or Close Encounters of the Third Kind.
And then he gets stabbed.The addition of Wesley certainly seemed to be a way to address and support the "family viewing" prime time timeslot of syndicated first-run TNG.
And then he gets stabbed.
Easily one of my least favorite parts.
Skipper was talking about The Motion Picture specifically, not TOS. I know that a great many TOS fans found TMP boring, dubbing it "The Motionless Picture."
Would a series where most episodes are perfectly family friendly, but some contain material that may not be suitable for kids be considered family friendly?
Excellent question. I suppose it depends? If you are using a device or streaming service that implements parental controls, individual episodes will probably have a rating. So the remaining ones will definitely be "a family show".More general question:
Would a series where most episodes are perfectly family friendly, but some contain material that may not be suitable for kids be considered family friendly?
Interesting, can you give a couple of examples of episodes each with one of the two ratings, please?In Australia, 39 episodes were rated the equivalent of PG in 1967. Only 40 were rated G. The episodes were never resubmitted to be re-rated here, causing a problem when a different network attempted to run the series again. Only the G episodes were shown during "family viewing" time slots.
But I am referring to memos from GR -- I am remembering now that these were letters sent to our Australian fan club (and to Diane Marchant, Australian Representative of the ST Welcommittee) by Gene and Majel themselves, during the making of TMP. He mentioned that he knew that Trek had became family viewing due to TOS reruns in early prime time, and was keeping that in mind during production of TMP.
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