^Good point.
But, if it were a Marshak/Culbreath novel, there wouldn't be anything he wouldn't trade!
But, if it were a Marshak/Culbreath novel, there wouldn't be anything he wouldn't trade!

As Harve Bennett explained, he believed if Kirk was going to get Spock back, there had to be a payment, a sacrifice: David and the Enterprise were it.
It kinda prompts the question; if some all-powerful being had actually given Kirk that choice directly, to trade the Enterprise for Spock's life, I wonder how he would've reacted? (He probably would've taken it eventually, but he might've thought about it a little while.)
Yeah. If after battling a tiny bird of prey, Sulu had plowed the Enterprise into the Genesis planet, that would have been lame.It certainly beat the E-D's destruction.
^Good point.
But, if it were a Marshak/Culbreath novel, there wouldn't be anything he wouldn't trade!![]()
If that is the case, I guess the fan reaction to Excelsior was so bad, they went back to Connie Refit. Best decision they could have made. That or build a new model that fans would like as a successor.I believe the original plan was for Kirk et al. to move over to the Excelsior, but there was also a feeling that if they were going to get Spock back they needed to make sacrifices along the way.
Building a new model was, honestly, never necessary. Nor was it ever in the budget.I stand corrected. However, I'm curious as to why a new, easier-to-film model was never built for the Ent-A. No money in the budget? Because the new model would have had only 10 seconds of screen time? Or just that sentimentality trumps filming woes?No, ILM is on record as having hated the TMP filming model. It was incredibly heavy, hard to light, hard to place on stands, hard to film, and very hard to bluescreen - especially when compared to the Reliant, Grissom, and then Excelsior.
My connection to fandom at the time was through the pages of Best of Trek, and it came as a surprise to me that the Excelsior was hated. It was good enough for the comic books, after all.However, fan anger re the "pregnant guppy" (Excelsior) seemed to cause the backtrack to reintroduce the TMP filming model as the "1701-A" in ST IV.
I'm not sure of the reasons but it did make for a rather dramatic moment in Trek movie history. The only other thing quite as knee jerk, imo, was Spock's death in TWOK.
No, the Excelsior really was planned to replace the Enterprise. Roddenberry hated the idea; I believe it was David Alexander's Star Trek Creator that said that Roddenberry was attached to the Enterprise in the way a World War II bomber pilot would have been attached to his B-17. While that may well have been part of Roddenberry's hatred of the idea of destroying the Enterprise and replacing it with a new ship, I suspect that the real hatred stemmed from Roddenberry's belief that Bennett was trying to put his own stamp on Star Trek.The Excelsior was never meant to replace the Enterprise. It was set up, from the get go, as a symbol of progress only, and always as an unworthy replacement. It represented Kirk and the original crew and their ship as aging and obsolete, a common theme thru many of the Kirk films from Khan to Undiscovered.
I think one of the reasons the writeres went with the Enterprise was destroyed because it was becoming redundant as the "Flagship"
In TOS' "The Ultimate Computer" Admiral Wesley commands his attack force for the M5 wargames from aboard the Lexington. It was never referenced onscreen, but you could assume that Wesley chose the Lexington to be his flagship for the exercise.
This gets repeated every so often and it's just flat out wrong. The only Enterprise ever referred to as Starfleet's or the Federation's flagship is TNG's 1701D. The TOS and movie Enterprise were never referred to or assumed to be anyone's flagship.
No, the Excelsior really was planned to replace the Enterprise. Roddenberry hated the idea; I believe it was David Alexander's Star Trek Creator that said that Roddenberry was attached to the Enterprise in the way a World War II bomber pilot would have been attached to his B-17.The Excelsior was never meant to replace the Enterprise. It was set up, from the get go, as a symbol of progress only, and always as an unworthy replacement. It represented Kirk and the original crew and their ship as aging and obsolete, a common theme thru many of the Kirk films from Khan to Undiscovered.
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