Gene Roddenberry is usually credited with being the creator of Star Trek. However, I'm of the opinion that the Star Trek that we have all come to know is not really the Trek that GR envisioned.
I just recently finished watching the "The Cage" on DVD. from my perspective, The Cage represents Trek the way GR always envisioned the concept. In watching The Cage, i could not help but notice how much it feels like Star Trek: The Motion Picture visually, in tone and concept. Related to that is the fact that TMP (and the preceeding Phase II) served as the inspiration for Star Trek: The Next Generation (especially its first few seasons). Its worth noting that left to his own devices, GR kept moving away from the look and feel of the bulk of TOS and going back to the Trek he intially created in The Cage.
One might think of the bulk of Trek (I.e. the rest of TOS and its movies) as Trek interrupted. The look and feel of TOS was not actually GR's idea. It was forced on him by NBC. NBC wanted a captain that shot from the hip and got into fist fights...GR initially gave them one that needed a counselor. In TMP, captain Kirk was once again having something of an emotial crisis as a result of getting on in years and being somewhat bored in his new administrative position. By the time of TNG, GR placed a counselor right on the bridge.
The look and feel of TOS was compromise between GR's vision and the demands of NBC. TMP was the only one of the TOS films where GR had a significant amount of control. After that film, Paramount brought in outsiders to ramp up the energy in the film series (giving it the more military and adventure feel that dominated the rest of the film series). The same is really true of TNG. That was GR's baby....and he was gradually pushed out.
It seems to me that there are actually two strands of Trek. The Trek that GR wanted ad kept trying to produce, and the Trek that he was forced into making (or made without much input from him).
If GR had been like say J.M.S. and had complete creative control over his property, would Trek have been as popular.
Personally I think that Jeffrey Hunter was a more interesting captain (not to mention being better looking and a better actor) but "Cage" Trek would have been more like TNG overall. I suspect that it would have had good story telling but would not have been well received in the 1960s.
I just recently finished watching the "The Cage" on DVD. from my perspective, The Cage represents Trek the way GR always envisioned the concept. In watching The Cage, i could not help but notice how much it feels like Star Trek: The Motion Picture visually, in tone and concept. Related to that is the fact that TMP (and the preceeding Phase II) served as the inspiration for Star Trek: The Next Generation (especially its first few seasons). Its worth noting that left to his own devices, GR kept moving away from the look and feel of the bulk of TOS and going back to the Trek he intially created in The Cage.
One might think of the bulk of Trek (I.e. the rest of TOS and its movies) as Trek interrupted. The look and feel of TOS was not actually GR's idea. It was forced on him by NBC. NBC wanted a captain that shot from the hip and got into fist fights...GR initially gave them one that needed a counselor. In TMP, captain Kirk was once again having something of an emotial crisis as a result of getting on in years and being somewhat bored in his new administrative position. By the time of TNG, GR placed a counselor right on the bridge.
The look and feel of TOS was compromise between GR's vision and the demands of NBC. TMP was the only one of the TOS films where GR had a significant amount of control. After that film, Paramount brought in outsiders to ramp up the energy in the film series (giving it the more military and adventure feel that dominated the rest of the film series). The same is really true of TNG. That was GR's baby....and he was gradually pushed out.
It seems to me that there are actually two strands of Trek. The Trek that GR wanted ad kept trying to produce, and the Trek that he was forced into making (or made without much input from him).
If GR had been like say J.M.S. and had complete creative control over his property, would Trek have been as popular.
Personally I think that Jeffrey Hunter was a more interesting captain (not to mention being better looking and a better actor) but "Cage" Trek would have been more like TNG overall. I suspect that it would have had good story telling but would not have been well received in the 1960s.