ShadowSonic wrote:
Well, the main problem with using that design would've been with the Paramount movie division. They wanted to have a ship entirely unique for the Trek movie series (both TOS and TNG), this is why we never saw a Constitution in TNG (Picard's old ship the Stargazer was supposed to have been a Constitution but they had to change it to a new model) and why we never saw a Sovereign outside the TNG Movies. That Consitution variant is too close to a Constitution for the show to have been allowed to use it.
Indeed, if I remember right, it took a bit of convincing for even the
Reliant to get approved in TWOK, because some studio persons were concerned that people wouldn't be able to figure out who the good guys were supposed to be.
Bounty wrote:No self-respecting Trekkie would've stood for the recycling of the movie design for a ship that was supposed to be a century more advanced.
Gene Roddenberry didn't have to put the show a century ahead. He could easily have put the show in the year after Star Trek 4 and he could have named the ship
Yorktown. Instead, he was more interested in indulging his private aesthetic and political tastes and going wherever his whims took him.
(Although, to be fair, I don't think he is at all alone among other TV scifi producers in that regard;
Babylon 5 and
Andromeda come immediately to mind, and I'm sure there's at least one other series which fell into the trap of its success ultimately giving its creator the power to become its undoing.)