"Gut punch"? Are Trek fans so fragile?
Yes.
"Gut punch"? Are Trek fans so fragile?
What the fuuuuuuuck it's been 20 years and I never noticed that until I rewatched the scene just now. The totally differently shaped nacelle is really blatant. If that happened today fans would be livid, "why does the destroyed Odyssey only show 11 decks in the saucer??!!", "lazy VFX people couldn't be bothered to get a nacelle from an AMT Enterprise-D!!"
Having the Odyssey be a Galaxy class was the perfect choice to make. At that time, Trek fans associated the Galaxy class as Starfleet's best of the best because they watched the Enterprise for seven years on TNG. They had an instinctive knowledge that this ship was Starfleet's toughest most advanced ship. So to see the Dominion tear one apart so quickly and easily in their first appearance and destroy the ship really drives home that the Dominion are a Serious Threat.About Enterprise-D and Galaxy class, I think it would have been better if Galaxy class didn't appear in DS9 or at least not as much as it did. Watching a Galaxy class ship first been blown up in 'The Jem'Hadar' and later being damaged in battles was kind of slap in the face for TNG fans.
MEMORY ALPHA says: "The choice to make the Odyssey a Galaxy-class starship was to demonstrate that the Jem'Hadar could have destroyed the Enterprise-D, had the ship appeared in the episode, and to make the Dominion threat all the more terrifying." - end quote
No, not cool. There might have been some other ways to demonstrate that the Dominion was a serious threat.
TOS itself did just that in The Doomsday Machine where the Constitution class USS Constellation was completely wrecked to show how much of a threat the titular Doomsday Machine posed to the Enterprise. Plus as already mentioned in the thread, TNG itself showed the Galaxy class USS Yamato destroyed in the opening scene of Contagion in order to show how high the stakes were for that episode. Plus, later after DS9 had established the Defiant was Starfleet's toughest and meanest ship around, they had it destroyed when the Breen joined the Dominion to show the Breen meant Serious Business. Plus, a year earlier, they showed up how powerful the Dominion's new battleship was by having it tear apart the Defiant class USS Valiant. Are any of these examples a slap in the face?What if TNG had taken a Constitution class ship or something else very familiar from TOS and destroyed it? No, just no.
Ignoring real world production reasons...
There were only 13 Connies to begin with right? And they lost at least 4 or 5 (counting the Enterprise) from the start of TOS to The Search for Spock. So by Voyage Home (assuming they didn’t create more) you’d only have 8-9 that had been refit and still in service and one of those became the 1701-A.
adding another 75 years, there may have only been 1 or 2 that were still active. And at least 1 non-refit in the fleet museum. A ship that old was likely only being used as a transport/escort or short range planetary defense. The kind of ship that would have been sent to Wolf 359 in case of emergency.
just not enough left to show onscreen.
The Excelsior's omnipresence throughout TNG had mostly to do with the fact they just kept reusing the same stock shots of the Enterprise and the Hood from Farpoint. Since they had those go-to shots ready to use, and anything with an Ambassador class would have to be new footage, well, cheaper and easier won out. Then after filming the Battle of Wolf 359 for the opening scene of Emissary on DS9, the Ambassador model got damaged and couldn't be used again.
The desktop models of the Constitution-class used in TNG were often altered to be have sideways nacelles, and, more importantly for this discussion, the windowed areas on the saucer replaced with what appear to be cargo doors. Looking at what happened to the Miranda being used as a cargo ship in TNG, it seems possible that these were also converted to cargo carriers.
Potentially, since the Wambundu-class from TNG is referred to as both a cruiser and a transport in TNG reference material, and given a speed of warp 3, which would have been about Warp 6 on the old scale, we may even have a class name for the converted ships once they become freighters. This gives us both an image for a previously unseen class, and an explanation of how there could be Constitution-class ships in TNG, but we don't see them.
As above, I like to think that there are variants of the Excelsior that help explain this. I've read from Ex Astris Scientia that, given a 642-meter Galaxy, the Excelsior was rendered at two different sizes over the life of the show, coming in at 467 and 511 meters, and one fan on this site suggested the Excelsior could be as big as 640 meters judging by its windows. To me, the Excelsior could have scalable components like the Galaxy does (in order to create New Orleans, Cheyenne, etc.) Thus what we see on TNG and DS9 are different classes even though they are shown with the same model. The Renaissance-class is a good name contender for the newer, large Excelsiors since they have NCC numbers in the mid 40000's.
Then the Ambassador-class serves as an advanced up-fitting of the Excelsior; not a refit, but newly-built ship with a more-featured, but similar spaceframe. The Ambassador has a very similar shape, but a bigger saucer and more filled-out hull. The Excelsior apparently did short missions on 3 years, so the Ambassador could handle longer ones or at least had a bigger crew and more facilities. This also explains why we see so few Ambassador-derived ships, since it would not be its own distinct generation of cruiser.
I think one of the most surprising scale perception issues was with the Oberth. I always perceived it to be quite small, but theres a docking port sticker on the side of one of its pylons that, when scale up to a connie's, makes it almost equal in size to the refit.
The Wambundu class was referred to as a light cruiser.
Even Adam Buckner used a TMP Enterprise bridge dome on his model of the Centaur (which used an Excelsior saucer) to show that the ship was much smaller than the Excelsior components he used to kitbash the model.
I think one of the most surprising scale perception issues was with the Oberth. I always perceived it to be quite small, but theres a docking port sticker on the side of one of its pylons that, when scale up to a connie's, makes it almost equal in size to the refit.
Doesn't non-canon literature state somewhere that the Enterprise-A was a newly-built, but, yet-to-be-named starship that later was named Enterprise? Or am I confusing that with it already being a previously-established ship that was renamed Enterprise? I can never remember.
I always thought the A was newer Constitution class simply because the interior seen at the end of The Voyage Home and The Final Frontier (albeit redesigned) suggests it's starting to take on the TNG look. Then, of course, Undiscovered Country throws all of that away anyway.
That makes more sense now, thank you.They were seeding the "gaseous anomalies" thing to set up the end of the movie. Rule of three, mention it at the beginning, then in the middle, where a cut scene showing Kirk giving Gorkon and his entourage the promised tour of the Enterprise mentioned the whole fleet was studying them, and then pay it off at the end. Unfortunately, the middle scene was removed, so it ends up being a little confused. Probably because it was redundant or made it too obvious that the gas sensors were going to be important later, though it's also the scene with the infamous "Would you let your daughter marry one?" line from a crewman to Uhura.
It's like the Klingon ship bridge completely changing between III and IV, or the Enterprise itself changing shape subtly in Nemesis and Star Trek Beyond.I always found it odd how at the end of IV:TVH, the bridge looked one way (with the TMP/TWOK/TSFS layout still in place) and then when we got V:TFF, it looked totally different. And yet no indication of time and yet another refit was mentioned in Scotty's monologue.
The TFF bridge was the appropriate evolution between TOS and TNG, so Meyers' new TUC layout seemed totally out of whack, and an unnecessary reinvention. Plus its location of the turboshafts didnt make sense with the filming models bridge proportions. I vote that TUC was the mistake in the design process... should have left for that a different type of ship.
It's like the Klingon ship bridge completely changing between III and IV
or the Enterprise itself changing shape subtly in Nemesis and Star Trek Beyond.
Sometimes you've just gotta pretend it always looked the way it did in whatever adventure you're currently watching.
the bridge looked amazing in V, myer really went toi far in my opinion to achieve is horatio hornblower in space motif for VI. The metal grate flooring, the galley, all felt wrong to me.
Thanks for the reply. I wondered of the Constitution was considered a light cruiser later on when the Excelsior came to exist, but I did not want to fully commit to that claim in my post.
I see where you are coming from with that. Given the different size bridges seen in the third and sixth movies, I decided to overlook that to a degree. Actually, the Bridge module was changed between the third and sixth movies now that I think about it, meaning that for many TNG appearances it would have had the larger bridge module. But it is mostly the early episodes made prior to Star Trek 6 for which the FX shots rendered the Excelsior larger compared with the Galaxy, and then later the Excelsior looks smaller, even the same shots were sometimes re-composited, so I'm not sure what was intended.
I tired to work it out one time and had the Oberth at 360 meters. That seems very big compared to what was intended, but then the rows of lights that look like windows on other ships work out better.
Same here. I use to watch Generations over and again but that scene still was stupid. But, "gut punched?" "Slap in the face?" Hardly.Funny, I was in the ‘audience’ and didn’t feel gut-punched. If anything, I was more annoyed that the Enterprise-D was destroyed in such a stupid way.
The problem is that there's zero information about what qualities a starship has that makes it be classified as a light cruiser, heavy cruiser, medium cruiser, frigate, (insert naval term here), etc. The Constitution class, the Ambassador class, and the Curiosity class were all referred to as heavy cruisers, but there's no indication as to why this is so, or why, say, the Galaxy class is not classified as a heavy cruiser.
Yes, the changes made to the model did seem to indicate that they were trying to scale the ship up. However, because of other factors (the changes made were to the same specific ship; the use of stock footage would flip-flop the two variants; the original configuration appeared larger in the 1st season than later; the MSD of the Enterprise-B seems to indicate a huge ship, even longer than the Enterprise-D, etc.) , there's no definitive proof of the ship's true size. And although I hear your idea that there are two separate sub-classes based on size, I again am not a fan of scaling a model up or down without making clear modifications that this is so. To this day it still bugs me that they scaled up the BoP to ridiculous proportions without bothering to make any changes to the model whatsoever, all to save money.
I'm curious how you came to that conclusion.
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