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Moderator: Vympel
Personally I think they should've used them properly or not at all, instead they were just book ends to the Soran story that mostly opened a big can of worms (why the multi-planetary destruction and superweapons when Guinan, on a exploding ship, left a clone of herself in the Nexus? And where was the "echo" of Soran if he experienced the Nexus as well?).Stofsk wrote:They never should have had Kirk, Chekov or Scotty in this film. It ruined it.
Ron Moore offered some kind of limp excuse that "every phaser blast and photon torpedo" costs money or some such shit, but even within the constraints they should have been able to write a compelling confrontation. They were just shitty storytellers - what else do you expect from the guys who brought us TNG season 7?Lord Revan wrote:alot of the problems of Generations seemed to me be due to the writers and crew trying too hard to make things look "cool" without thinking what actually makes them so "cool" in the first place.
Take the Ent-D vs. BOP fight of example, in the movie the Enterprise gets supriced by cheap trick and the true resorts to using a cheap trick of their own to beat a far inferior enemy, it just doesn't have the feel of accomplishment it suppose to have, but had Enterprise opened up with everything it had dispite the enemy being able to pass it's defeses at ease, sure the "hero" would have still gone down from it's "wounds" but it would felt more like a heroic "I'm taking you with me" moment then the "my deus ex machina is stronger then yours" moment that's in the movie.
I listened to the audio-commentary awhile back and RDM and Braga realized they fucked up somewhere when they saw the big meeting between Kirk and Picard had them in a kitchen cooking eggs.Stofsk wrote:They never should have had Kirk, Chekov or Scotty in this film. It ruined it.
TOS had its massive send off moment at the end of TUC. The TNG cast deserved better than Generations delivered to them.
Perhaps that and above all Captain Kirk HAVING HIS SON BACK, you know the son who was neglected while a boy and once Kirk finally patched things up with his son Marcus many years later, Marcus was then abrubtly murdered?!Wyrm wrote: I have no idea how to fix Kirk's paradise, other than making it a swashbuckling, space opera-style shingding.
They'd have to do a recast (maybe have Kirk raising a Nexus fantasy, younger version of him) as the actor who played David had died by the time of Generations.Big Orange wrote:Perhaps that and above all Captain Kirk HAVING HIS SON BACK, you know the son who was neglected while a boy and once Kirk finally patched things up with his son Marcus many years later, Marcus was then abrubtly murdered?!Wyrm wrote: I have no idea how to fix Kirk's paradise, other than making it a swashbuckling, space opera-style shingding.
Extremely limp excuse. They were able to do a more compelling confrontation in Season 3 with not one but two alpha strikes from the Enterprise D.Uraniun235 wrote: Ron Moore offered some kind of limp excuse that "every phaser blast and photon torpedo" costs money or some such shit, but even within the constraints they should have been able to write a compelling confrontation.
Well, no, since B5 used CGI exclusively for space battles but Generations and the Star Trek shows continued to use mostly models. It was a very clear decision on the part of JMS and the rest of B5 creative team: they knew that CGI would become outdated much quicker, but it also allowed them to do stuff that they could have never done with miniature models considering the budget. That decision has stood the test of time; while the B5 first season SFX are badly outdated, the battle scenes still work dramatically, even if they look like late 1990s or early 2000s computer games.Skylon wrote:
A feature film with a far greater budget, and effects done by ILM couldn't come up with something closer to that?
I don't know about that... It's not every day you get to beat Alex DeLarge and Emperor Caligula all in one packageSerafina wrote:He doesn't fight unbelievable odds, he is not commanding a spaceship trough the maws of hell, he is not battling an ancient superbeing.
I always assumed that since Data apparently records everything that happens, eight years of memories with emotional impact would now be cropping up in his head. Of course, that implies a great deal of programming stupidity on Soong's part.Ghost Rider wrote:And why does Data go "I pissed in my pants!!!" because of emotions? Eh, I'll just say Picard's weepiness broke him.
The production crews of ST 2 and ST 6 did much better jobs creating dramatic battles than Generations on tight (for feature film) budgets. When you compare those films to Generations, which probably blew a ton of money on a pointless holodeck scene you got to wonder.Marcus Aurelius wrote:Well, no, since B5 used CGI exclusively for space battles but Generations and the Star Trek shows continued to use mostly models. It was a very clear decision on the part of JMS and the rest of B5 creative team: they knew that CGI would become outdated much quicker, but it also allowed them to do stuff that they could have never done with miniature models considering the budget. That decision has stood the test of time; while the B5 first season SFX are badly outdated, the battle scenes still work dramatically, even if they look like late 1990s or early 2000s computer games.Skylon wrote:
A feature film with a far greater budget, and effects done by ILM couldn't come up with something closer to that?
I'm curious as to how they compared at the time with regard not just for cost, but also for time; I remember reading that on several occasions, Babylon 5's space effects were limited by the sheer rendering time necessary. If motion-control photography required less time but was more expensive due to the necessity of going in afterward and animating the phaser blasts and torpedoes, I could see Paramount preferring to spring for models. Alternately it could just be that they'd already amassed a lot of experience and inertia with models and it took a long time before they finally felt they could get superior results from CGI.Skylon wrote: That said it surprised me just how long Trek clung to models. The battle between the Defiant and Lakota in "Paradise Lost" was shot with models.
And this is why Babylon 5 wins for being my favorite Sci-Fi show of all time.Skylon wrote:Compare this battle to what Babylon 5 offered up viewers earlier in 1994, the same year Generations was released, in the episode "Signs and Portents". Yeah, its shitty looking, especially sixteen years later, but damned if it isn't more exciting. With a shoe-string budget the episode had multiple fighters in dogfights, B5's never-before-seen defense grid shooting at crap, plus two new starship models for the episode (the Raider's carrier and the Shadow vessel).
A feature film with a far greater budget, and effects done by ILM couldn't come up with something closer to that?
Oh, and the protagonist didn't need to pull technobabble BS to win in said B5 episode. He drew his enemy into a murder-zone, caught in the middle of two fighter squadrons and the station's defense grid.