Television The Star Trek Thread V6.0

Because they filmed it for the syndication market, which was pretty all 4:3. There's a cool documentary on the TNG blu ray, on why they couldn't do them in widescreen. Here's a pic of them filming a scene, and it shows you what actually be shown in widescreen. Often they had lights so close to the actors, no ceilings, and often wouldn't have the complete sets up. Everything would be distorted if they did it as widescreen, and since they spent so much money restoring the original negative, it didn't make sense to then digitally stretch it.

tng_extras_003.jpg

Too bad. Widescreen ST:TNG episodes woulda been fuckin’ sweet.
 
Saturday, July 20, 11:30 AM -1:00 PM San Diego time is the time frame for the Star Trek panel at Comic Con (2:30 PM Eastern / 8:30 PM Central European Summer Time).

Mark your calendars.
 
Mrs fett bought me for my birthday the destiny series and the prey series. Super stoked to start both
 
Destiny is fantastic, but you know that I guess
Yeah. I've read the series before, shes a librarian so I've checked out the series a few times. But I've never read the prey series so I hope it goes well.
 
Yeah. I've read the series before, shes a librarian so I've checked out the series a few times. But I've never read the prey series so I hope it goes well.


But why did she buy you a series she knew you had read already? Did she forget, or are you the type to collect stuff?

I'll assume you like Star Wars based on the nick - I still got a personalized Jeremy Bulloch autograph somewhere in a box.
 
But why did she buy you a series she knew you had read already? Did she forget, or are you the type to collect stuff?

I'll assume you like Star Wars based on the nick - I still got a personalized Jeremy Bulloch autograph somewhere in a box.
I wanted to add it to my book collection. I felt that I enjoyed it enough to warrant actually buying them
 
Seriously, if I had one wish, one thing I could desire from Kurtzman, it would be to make an animated version of Destiny. It could be done in a way that it doesn't contradict movie/series canon and could be reduced in complexity. I think that would heal the wounds for hardcore fans.

Also, they're doing a comedy animated series, a kids animated series, why not do a limited serious one, too?
 
One question to those who might know. Are there any books, flashback episodes, comics etc. that tell us about the time between Star Trek V and VI? It is seven years after all. Was there another Enterprise five-year mission under Kirk?

EDIT: nm, I found the Memory Beta Timeline. Wow, there's a bunch of comics, but not even a proper novelization the way it looks.
 
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Mrs fett bought me for my birthday the destiny series and the prey series. Super stoked to start both
Destiny is one of the best sci fi series ever. Prey was fun aswell
 
First Picard production still has leaked. I'd say solid 90% chance we will get a trailer this weekend

 
Some new Picard details

Picard was promoted to admiral in 2381, and given a special assignment from Star fleet

In 2386 Picard retired from Star Fleet and return to his families winery in France.

For reference, Nemesis took place 2379.
 
Some new Picard details

Picard was promoted to admiral in 2381, and given a special assignment from Star fleet

In 2386 Picard retired from Star Fleet and return to his families winery in France.

For reference, Nemesis took place 2379.

What was Star Trek (2009) year?
 
What was Star Trek (2009) year?
Kelvin incident took place 2387 when the black hole destroyed Romulus, which means this may be when Picard takes place. That would seem to contradict some of the info from the count down series.

Part of the display at SDCC is Picard various awards and achievements, and there are two planetary awards from Andor and Vulcan around the time he was an admiral, for some great achievement.

So who knows how closely they will follow established date canon.
 
Star Trek: Picard producer reveals 7 new details about series

By James Hibberd
July 18, 2019 at 09:52 AM EDT



Star Trek: Picard team is pulling back the veil on the upcoming series that returns Patrick Stewart to role he played for seven seasons on the 1990s syndicated hit series Star Trek: The Next Generation and in four feature films.

Executive producer Alex Kurtzman and showrunner Michael Chabon gave EW some new hints about Jean-Luc Picard’s journey in the upcoming CBS All-Access series. Until now, the only teaser has shown Picard in retirement at his family’s vineyard in France and included a cryptic voiceover suggesting the admiral left Starfleet after he led an armada on a rescue mission to the doomed planet Romulus.


Here are seven things we learned:


1. Yes, Picard is going back into space. Strangely enough for a Trek series, nothing space-y has yet been shown regarding the new show, which has entirely terrestrial marketing images so far. Even our basic questions like, “Can you at least say if the show is set on a spaceship?” were dodged when we asked the producers. But Kurtzman confirms the new Star Trek will live up to its name. “Events began to unfold that conspire to take Picard back to the stars,” Kurtzman says.

2. But that doesn’t mean Picard is returning to Starfleet. “He will [go to space],” Kurtzman adds, “but not in a way that anyone expects.” What does that mean? It sounds like Picard won’t simply get drafted back into commanding a starship — especially considering what Kurtzman reveals next.

3. Picard seeks to fight a specific injustice, yet won’t have his usual resources. “Because he’s no longer in Starfleet, he no longer carries the weight of that behind him,” Kurtzman says. “In some ways, it’s easier to be [a great man] when you’re a captain. But it’s an entirely different thing when you don’t have an army behind you. When you want to get something done and fight an injustice, how do you do that when you’re really only one man?”


4. His quest will be a serialized story in the first season, unlike the episodic The Next Generation. “Which isn’t necessarily new for Star Trek,” Chabon said, noting that Discovery is often serialized too, “but that is new for Picard.”

5. Picard is “haunted” and older but fundamentally remains the same character. “There are many things that haunt Picard,” Kurtzman teases, adding the ill-fated Romulus mission is just one of those things. And Chabon notes the series will incorporate that the character is a different age. “He’s a lot older and we’re not shying away from that at all — we’re dealing with a man who’s in a very different place in his life,” Chabon says. Yet at the same time, Picard will still be the man you know and love. “It was terribly important to us that he remains fundamentally Picard,” Kurtzman says. “You will not see a version that betrays the man we loved from Next Generation. We’re not doing that. But we wanted to put a character with that level of morality and leadership and who always does the right thing no matter how hard the circumstances … we wanted to put that to the test.”

6. Other Next Generation actor appearances are not being ruled out. The producers just want to make sure they’re not, you know, cheesy. “What we don’t want to do is just throw in cameos,” Kurtzman says. “There would have to be an incredibly specific story reason [for them to be there].” Former Next Gen star Jonathan Frakes was previously announced as directing two episodes in the first season, but there’s no word if he appears on camera. The show’s new regular cast members (Alison Pill, Michelle Hurd, Evan Evagora, Isa Briones, Santiago Cabrera, and Harry Treadaway) are not playing any familiar Next Gen characters, Kurtzman confirms.


7. Stewart as Picard is better than you’ve ever seen him. “The quality of Patrick’s acting, if anything, has gotten even better over time and he was already a master,” Chabon says. “He has an ability to hold you riveted even when he’s just sitting and listening.” Naturally. Picard is always at his best when he looks … engaged.


https://ew.com/tv/2019/07/18/star-trek-picard-storyline/
 
Kelvin incident took place 2387 when the black hole destroyed Romulus, which means this may be when Picard takes place. That would seem to contradict some of the info from the count down series.

Part of the display at SDCC is Picard various awards and achievements, and there are two planetary awards from Andor and Vulcan around the time he was an admiral, for some great achievement.

So who knows how closely they will follow established date canon.


The exhibit features a handful of elements from the upcoming Picardseries, with the highlight being his civilian outfit featured in the previously released teaser images. Notably, the placard describes it is as “Jean-Luc Picard Civilian Attire, 2399,” confirming Star Trek: Picard is set in the year 2399 — twenty years after Star Trek: Nemesis


https://trekmovie.com/2019/07/18/the-first-duty-sdcc-exhibition-reveals-star-trek-picard-details/
 
Apparently Picard is suppose to be 94 years old in Picard

Remember the Human lifespan has been extended quite a bit. Dr. McCoy in encounter at farpoibt was 134 years old, so Picard is still a spry young man
 
Apparently Picard is suppose to be 94 years old in Picard

Don't see an issue with that. Medical advancement, established canon of McCoy visiting the 1701-D at 137 years old, etc. - they sure will push the age aspect of the story, but it also makes sense. Picard was 59 when he took command of the Enterprise. Stewart was younger, but the age progression since then is similar.
 
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