"Our chances of returning from this mission in one piece may have just doubled"
and more.
Those parts are very integral to TMP. To me, they're maybe even more important than any updated FX or V'Ger cloud editing.
But then they leave the extremely annoying and completely unnecessary repetition of all Kirk's commands by Sulu.....
"Reverse angle on the viewer"--Kirk
"Reverse angle on the viewer"--Sulu
"Thrusters ahead"--Kirk
"Thrusters ahead--Sulu
Really, they thought those repetitive lines were more valuable to keep than the lines where the crew show some personality/insight?
Also there was/is no precedent for the crew repeating back the orders. On the series they used to just say aye or even just nod.
But then they leave the extremely annoying and completely unnecessary repetition of all Kirk's commands by Sulu.....
"Reverse angle on the viewer"--Kirk
"Reverse angle on the viewer"--Sulu
"Thrusters ahead"--Kirk
"Thrusters ahead--Sulu
Really, they thought those repetitive lines were more valuable to keep than the lines where the crew show some personality/insight?
Also there was/is no precedent for the crew repeating back the orders. On the series they used to just say aye or even just nod.
I agree with you about taking important character lines out of the DE, but not necessarily about these repetitive lines. The idea of a helmsman (or other crewman) repeating an order is that it allows the captain to confirm that the crewman heard his order correctly. Like, imagine if a captain said, "Helmsman, change course, 90 degree heading," and the helmsman just said "Aye, Sir" and turned to a 19 degree heading. If nobody notices the mistake for a few minutes, they could be wildly off-course (especially if they're going fast).
That's the way things are done in the modern navy, and so even if it wasn't in the original show, it was presumably added to the movie for the sake of verisimilitude, to make Starfleet seem like a more realistic, believable paramilitary organization.
But then they leave the extremely annoying and completely unnecessary repetition of all Kirk's commands by Sulu.....
"Reverse angle on the viewer"--Kirk
"Reverse angle on the viewer"--Sulu
"Thrusters ahead"--Kirk
"Thrusters ahead--Sulu
Really, they thought those repetitive lines were more valuable to keep than the lines where the crew show some personality/insight?
Also there was/is no precedent for the crew repeating back the orders. On the series they used to just say aye or even just nod.
I agree with you about taking important character lines out of the DE, but not necessarily about these repetitive lines. The idea of a helmsman (or other crewman) repeating an order is that it allows the captain to confirm that the crewman heard his order correctly. Like, imagine if a captain said, "Helmsman, change course, 90 degree heading," and the helmsman just said "Aye, Sir" and turned to a 19 degree heading. If nobody notices the mistake for a few minutes, they could be wildly off-course (especially if they're going fast).
That's the way things are done in the modern navy, and so even if it wasn't in the original show, it was presumably added to the movie for the sake of verisimilitude, to make Starfleet seem like a more realistic, believable paramilitary organization.
But they took stuff that was interesting out and left uninteresting stuff in.
We're talking about a movie not real life--there's a dozen things they could do to make the ship more like a real navy---I'm talking about making it a better movie not making it more REAL.
But they took stuff that was interesting out and left uninteresting stuff in.
I don't see how the two are related, though. Unlike the theatrical cut, the DE had no predefined run-time, so there was no reason they couldn't have kept the interesting character moments and the repetitive orders. One in no way precludes the other.
??? The point of the DE was to try to make a better movie than either the Theatrical or SLV--leaving IN uninteresting things simply because there is no predetermined run time is certainly NOT a method of making a better version.
??? The point of the DE was to try to make a better movie than either the Theatrical or SLV--leaving IN uninteresting things simply because there is no predetermined run time is certainly NOT a method of making a better version.
The point of a director's edition is to make a movie that the director feels is better. Robert Wise was clearly interested in a greater atmosphere of realism and verisimilitude, so it's to be expected that he'd maintain that artistic philosophy when recutting the DE. If you don't agree with the director's artistic philosophy, it seems like not watching the Director's Edition would be your best bet.
LOL. Wise was interested in verisimilitude because he followed the script (which he had little input with...
That's laughable. STTMP was not 2001 where there was one grand sci-fi element and everything else regarding space travel was made to be as realistic as possible in 1968.
What you are pointing out is the thing that some folks think Paramount got wrong with TMP (Too serious, too different from it's roots) and other people actually like about it.
That's a fine debate and I like TMP okay as a one-time experiment into pure epic movie-making.
If epic sci-fi movie making needs to be slow, repetitive and dull is another issue.
Doing a director's cut is presumably to improve the movie from it's rushed into theaters incarnation to something that is better paced and does justice to the characters that inspired it to be made in the first place.
I think it's a general consensus that the SLV and the DE do more justice to the characters. I think most fans just think it's a shame that a fair number of nice lines and character moments were lost in the DE and a lot of stuff that is really not needed was kept in.
If you think it would have been somehow better with the missing lines reinserted AND all the repeat orders left in as well--then we just disagree on that.
I happen to think that the movie can be both epic and serious and intellectual without being slow and poorly paced.
I think all 3 versions are slowly paced and kind of let the audience drift when they should be enamored of the story.
The issue is that "better" is subjective, and you can say "the film would be better if X" but if the director thought "X" didn't work or muddled "Y" and "Z" which she thought was the core of the film, who is right? As has been demonstrated in various threads on TMP over the years a lot of what some people consider unforgivable cuts in the theatrical release are considered by others as correct choices. It's always subjective at some level.
Whenever I watch a sci-fi film I tend to compare it back to TMP SLV. The SLV is the closest to the ultimate sci-fi film for me. I would the SLV on DVD or Blue-ray with two changes. The FX shots of the Enterprise when Kirk is going after Spock and you see the soundstage and the FX shots of the Enterprise when they are walking on the hull.
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