Exclusive 11ft Enterprise Star Trek Master Shots
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- Опубліковано 30 тра 2024
- 🌟 Join us on a journey through the iconic Enterprise shots from the original Star Trek series! 🚀 Discover the fascinating history behind each clip, from the first-generation Trekkie perspective to the intricate details of model filming techniques.
🎞️ Explore rare footage and behind-the-scenes insights into how the Enterprise appeared on early analog television screens. From the Corbomite Maneuver to The Trouble with Tribbles, uncover the secrets behind each episode's unique shots and their impact on Star Trek history.
🔍 Delve into production quirks, unused footage, and the meticulous restoration process of the Enterprise model by the Smithsonian. Learn about the significance of specific shots, like the iconic phaser firing scene from Journey to Babel, and their enduring legacy in the Star Trek universe.
💫 Experience the nostalgia of classic Star Trek episodes while gaining a newfound appreciation for the artistry behind every frame. Don't miss this exclusive look at the Enterprise shots that shaped a generation of sci-fi fans!
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#StarTrek #EnterpriseShots #OriginalSeries #BehindTheScenes #Trekkie #SciFiHistory #IconicMoments #SmithsonianRestoration #NostalgiaTrip #SciFiFans #StarTrekCommunity #ClassicTV #ProductionInsights #ModelFilming #StarTrekTrivia - Розваги
I can vouch for local TV stations airing Star Trek episodes on 16mm film. I was an intern at a local station in Salt Lake City in 1985 and we aired Star Trek from 16mm film.
Building a lighted 22" version right now! ❤
Great Video (and channel)! Just a quick note about one of the shots. It looked to me that the shot from "The Ultimate Computer" (2nd Season) was actually from "All Our Yesterdays" (3rd Season). But I could be mistaken. 🙂
I wanted to point out that the video watermark is over the titles so you can prevent it in future videos.
These quick bit videos and the shorts are actually clips from the longer videos on the channel which have no watermarks. The larger video for this one goes into far greater detail with example and episode lists for each of the VFX clips. But I do appreciate the head’s up! Sent from my iPad
At 3:49 the picture on the right you can clearly see the missing block on the left side of the secondary haul.
Wow! You have a great eye for detail! You're absolutely correct. I've never even noticed that before. -Jim
The flyaway shot in Mudd’s Woman is one of my favorites
The shot of the Enterprise firing phasers was also a poster on my bedroom wall
You know, I forgotten that until you just mentioned it. I had the same poster on my wall as well. Small world, isn't it?
I'm a bit confused.
What is the difference in the fly away shot from Mudd's Women (bottom right) and the fly away shot from Balance of Terror? They look the same to me.
It would also be interesting to me to see the fly-by from The Corbomite Maneuver (bottom left) and the fly by from The Ultimate Computer side by side. The second of these has always bothered me because the pace seems to change as it is passing and because the matting seems to interfere with the shot and make the right side of the saucer section not appear until late in the shot. It's pretty obvious in this clip from All Our Yesterdays, but it's also like that whenever it is used during the third season.
Great stuff.
Hi Brian! I have a longer video which this is condensed from ua-cam.com/video/7cNdQVypH-I/v-deo.html. It will actually show you every clip in each of the episodes that featured that clip after the first. It should give you a bit greater clarity on the differences.
@@TREK-WORLD
I am afraid I am still confused (I had watched this video before, and it is great.)
This longer video doesn't go into details about the fly away shot in Mudd's Women, only in Balance of Terror. So, is it a different shot?
Ok... So I've gone back to the actual episodes and my notes and the fly away that was first seen in Balance of Terror was used a total of 13 times in the series. It was not used in Mudd's Women. And the Fly Away shown in Mudd's Women was actually used from Where No Man Has Gone Before footage.
You've given me an idea though, I may do a video series showing all the enterprise opticals used in each episode.
@@TREK-WORLD That would be great.
Thanks.
Was the 3" model only used in 'Catspaw?'
We’ve never been able to prove it; but we suspect that it was also used in Doomsday Machine for one of the shots of the Enterprise at extreme long range when seen along side the Doomsday Machine. Whatever model they used, it was really small. And there’s no record of what became of the little 4inch model that Matt made way back during that prototyping sessions with Gene and Bob. Sent from my iPad
I thought I saw in one of these videos the 3" was also used in The Doomsday Machine for an fx shot (about to go into the mouth of the doomsday machine)...maybe I'm wrong?
No, I think you're right. It looks that way to me as well; but there is no record of them using it in the Doomsday Machine. Hopefully, I'll find some documentation in the future that helps prove or disprove it.
Wait how can there be none in Season 3 if they used one last shot in the episode That Which Survives?
The shot had actually been filmed well before Season 3’s first shots were filmed. As a result, the model stayed in storage until loaned to Craig Thompson in 1973.
@@TREK-WORLD If that’s so then only one ship got shooting shots during production of Season Three. And that ship was the Klingon Battlecruiser.
Correct!
star trek looked FINE on our TV in the 70s. your video starts with really bad VHS dubs.
You were far luckier than I. lol. Our TV station was fuzzy and had ghosting issues from the truck drivers who used amplified radios. Occasionally they could even be heard louder than the tv show. Unfortunately, not many Americans lived within a close distance to a metropolitan area back in the 60s and 70s. At our house we used to have to turn the antenna on the side of the house to try to clear up the images coming from Norfolk. However, you are correct as far as the VHS source is. You would be surprised how little VHS recordings exist today that were taken directly from off-the-air. Not too mention that the tapes the stations were given were 16mm dubs of the original 35mm masters. Most of the clips you will find on UA-cam from the early 70s are in very poor condition.
@@TREK-WORLD if it makes you feel any better, we had one of those open commune phone numbers... a party line, and not the new hookup kind
You know, we had one too! It was great fun listening in on other folks conversations until Mom and Dad made us hang up. 😀 It was a guilty pleasure that we would revisit about 15 years later when we discovered that we could hear some of our neighbors cordless phones on our CB walkie talkies.
@@TREK-WORLD I hated ours. I had a deckhead (and I don't mean trekkie) classmate online trying to threaten me. As to T.V. we lived 20 miles outside syracuse, but had a big antenna and a directional "tuner". syracuse is a major market and once held the record for most coffee consumed per-capita, and a local arbys winning "best fast food store in the country" one year. good pizza, haddock sandwiches, and hoffman's hotdogs there (liverpool). the "best part" of local T.V. for me, was growing up to saturday morning cartoons that ended with *monster movie matinee* (a local show hosted by dr witty, only seen as a black fingernailed dracula hand directing 'evol', love backwards, a stitched face igor and soul train, and watching little rascals, the electric company, & zoom when I got home from school. vegetable soup was on for a minute too.
Amazingly so, our early childhood expereriences had so many parallels. The saturday morning cartoons leading to Creature Ferature. And our directional "tuner" was me sticking my hand out through a hole in our screen so that I could rotate the shoft of our TV antenna. 😀😀😀
StarTrek of Terror? That overlapping title is kinda annoying and funny at the same time. 1:57