Star Trek Continues Meets Kickstarter Goal, Aims For Stretch Goals
jdavidb writes: A couple of months ago on Slashdot, I learned about Star Trek Continues, a faithful continuation of the Star Trek original series five-year mission, lovingly recreated by Vic Mignogna and a dedicated cast and crew. The original Enterprise set from Desilu has been recreated, great scripts have been written, fantastic guest stars have been enlisted, including stars from the original series and other Star Trek voyages, and the three episodes filmed so far look like they genuinely came from the era that produced the original series. Continues has now turned my children on to original series Star Trek, and we eagerly await more episodes.
Continues has two more days to go in their Kickstarter campaign. They have already raised enough money to produce two more episodes and meet their first stretch goal: creating a set for Engineering. They're also bumping up against their next stretch goal: creating a planet set so the Continues Enterprise team can visit strange new worlds and experience the tragic loss of nameless redshirts.
Continues has two more days to go in their Kickstarter campaign. They have already raised enough money to produce two more episodes and meet their first stretch goal: creating a set for Engineering. They're also bumping up against their next stretch goal: creating a planet set so the Continues Enterprise team can visit strange new worlds and experience the tragic loss of nameless redshirts.
Shatner was a stage actor - that's why he acted so BIG.
And speaking of flat, ST:TNG doesn't hold up. I remember back in 1987 when it first came on and how excited I was to have a new Star Trek. Watching on Netflix now, I can't help thinking what a piece of shit it was. Yeah, there were some good episodes, but it sucked.
Voyager sucked too, Deep Space Nine was held together by Brooks but was still kinda crappy; although better than the other new Star Treks.
These new guys are doing a respectable job but I see what you mean. Vic has all the energy which, in a way, reproduces the dynamic on the original series.
The problem is that Star Trek isn't a very good science fiction premise.
If only some film maker would get a kickstarter program going to make something by the masters: Heinlein, Asimov, etc .... Those guys wrote great stories and in this day and age, shouldn't be a problem bringing it to the screen.
I watched Doomsday Machine a few months ago, and within 5 minutes I'd forgotten about the mid 60s sets and effects. The story and acting was that good.
The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
Don't skip The Emissary, Elementary, Dear Data, The Measure of a Man, Q Who, Contagion, or A Matter of Honor.
Even the much maligned first season had "don't miss" episodes. Some you have to watch for continuity (Encounter at Farpoint, The Neutral Zone, Datalore, and Skin of Evil), but a handful were actually decent standalone episodes (The Battle and 11001001).
Seasons 1 and 2 had a lot of hokey moments but they also have hidden gems. Seasons 3 and 4 contain the crown jewels of TNG, after that it was kind of a gradual decline as the writers ran out of ideas, albeit with some really amazing episodes (Chain of Command was Season 6 and is among the best of TNG) along the way. Even most of the mediocre episodes aren't unwatchable, of course there are exceptions to the rule (Sub Rosa, Genesis, and Masks come to mind).
I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
Destroyed. At the end of every season, the CG models for Babylon 5 assets were deleted according to contract requirements with the Prime Time Entertainment Network who distributed the show. Probably as an asset reduction thing for financial BS in the era of protoCG-era production.
My own pointless vanity vintage computing page