Eh? they look like Connie refit/Kelvin-Connie weapon ports to me.
They look like gun turrets.
Eh? they look like Connie refit/Kelvin-Connie weapon ports to me.
Adams/McQuarrie's concept work
To pick a nit that has seemingly resulted from a typo (misplaced apostrophe) in the tweet from the McQuarrie Archives, his name was Ken Adam, not Adams. Sad to see he died just a few months ago; I wonder if he was aware his design was finally being put to good use after all these years? Or perhaps his passing served as an inspiration to revisit it in the first place?The design is very close to these Adams' views.
I'm weird. I find the design a bit interesting. If you look at the lines and flow, it really isn't that far removed from the Enterprise-D, which was largely inspired by this design. The D just curved and smoothed it all up a bit more.
What a distinguished and talented artist Ken Adam was! His Strangelove War Room set is deservedly iconic.To pick a nit that has seemingly resulted from a typo (misplaced apostrophe) in the tweet from the McQuarrie Archives, his name was Ken Adam, not Adams. Sad to see he died just a few months ago; I wonder if he was aware his design was finally being put to good use after all these years? Or perhaps his passing served as an inspiration to revisit it in the first place?
It's not the most beautiful design imaginable, but being a fan of the Titan ships, I think the negative reaction by 50% of fandom is way out of proportion to the reality of it's aesthetics. Again we see what happens when you mess around with the narrow visions of many Trekkies.
The design is very close to these Adams' views.![]()
Oh for fuck's sake, can we please stop acting like people who don't like this design have a “narrow vision” or can't accept change in Star Trek. There are a lot of people who just don't find the ship well-designed or appealing. Doesn't mean we don't want something new and different.It's not the most beautiful design imaginable, but being a fan of the Titan ships, I think the negative reaction by 50% of fandom is way out of proportion to the reality of it's aesthetics. Again we see what happens when you mess around with the narrow visions of many Trekkies.
Nope. Most remarks revolve around very pre-conceived ideas and long formed opinions about how a ship "Should" look..that a ship has to look "balanced" when with fictional technology it really doesn't. Then we get a long laundry list of what's "wrong" with the ship that's based on very closely measured distances between pylon and engine nacelles, etc that were are supposed to take as religion and talked about with the same fervor, and generally it amounts to a lot of BS.Oh for fuck's sake, can we please stop acting like people who don't like this design have a “narrow vision” or can't accept change in Star Trek. There are a lot of people who just don't find the ship well-designed or appealing. Doesn't mean we don't want something new and different.
I think it is fair to point out that it is also possible for fans to be "religious" in their acceptance of every single thing that the Star Trek franchise releases.Nope. Most remarks revolve around very pre-conceived ideas and long formed opinions about how a ship "Should" look..that a ship has to look "balanced" when with fictional technology it really doesn't. Then we get a long laundry list of what's "wrong" with the ship that's based on very closely measured distances between pylon and engine nacelles, etc that were are supposed to take as religion and talked about with the same fervor, and generally it amounts to a lot of BS.
RAMA
I don't understand why people are happy to see McQuarrie's work featured in Star Trek. All I see from folks are comments about his legendary status, but not actually praising the shape of the ship. Just because someone did well on some things doesn't mean that all of their work automatically becomes perfect.
I like the design.
It is fun trivia that they are running with a design from the 1970's by a pair of legendary creators.
Trek has a long history of having ship designs that are supposed to fit some sort of almost real world science rules...
That is a fan created myth. Jefferies was mixing and matching identifiable sci-fi ships of the time to create the Enterprise. I don't think science entered the mix at all.
Fans are just use to the saucer being bigger than the secondary hull.
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