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50 years of Star Trek

Remember how advanced it was, handheld communicators, sick bay monitors, and like. Today with cell phones, modern med equipment it seems so dated.
But I love it none the less.
 
Remember how advanced it was, handheld communicators, sick bay monitors, and like. Today with cell phones, modern med equipment it seems so dated.
But I love it none the less.

I saw a show some time ago about some of the technology that was inspired by ST. Things like flip phones, flat screen TVs, for example.
 
I remember wanting to skip the end of a high school football game so-as to get home to watch the latest episode!
 
I remember wanting to skip the end of a high school football game so-as to get home to watch the latest episode!

When watching the old episodes now on Netflix I realize how hokey their "special effects" were. Most of the "aliens" just looked like humans with face paint and weird hair (or remember Gorn - the guy in the big rubber lizard suit?) When they are on some other planet, and you watch on an HD TV, you can tell they are just on a sound stage with a colored background that is supposed to be the alien sky and the rocks all around are painted chunks of styrofoam.

I also chuckle at the fact that, despite the Enterprise often being buffeted around during combat, etc., none of the personnel were ever strapped in - they all sat in what looked like cheap fiberglass kitchen chairs that were not even attached to the floor.

Nevertheless, it was a fun show and still is.
 
Riverside, IA, future birthplace of James T. Kirk.
Future_Birthplace_of_Captain_James_T_Kirk.jpg
https://trekfest.com
 
Probably true of nearly all sci-fis (though "2001" was way ahead of it's time with effects). The Star Trek ones seemed OK back then, but are hokey now.
 
Probably true of nearly all sci-fis (though "2001" was way ahead of it's time with effects). The Star Trek ones seemed OK back then, but are hokey now.

They probably seemed ok due to the very low resolution TVs we were watching back then.
 
Probably true of nearly all sci-fis (though "2001" was way ahead of it's time with effects). The Star Trek ones seemed OK back then, but are hokey now.

You think those special effects were hokey, check these out (the front of the rocket ship looks like a flying pig and the sword fight was definitely pre-light saber):

 
I used to think those bucket-heads were scary!
I love the way that show devolves to a good old-fashioned sword-fights. :highly_amused:
 
As hokey as some of the old effects were, I still prefer them to the gratuitous and completely overdone CGI effects we see in a lot of modern Sci-Fi

If you really want to see hokey effects, watch the old episodes of Ultraman.
 
You think those special effects were hokey, check these out (the front of the rocket ship looks like a flying pig and the sword fight was definitely pre-light saber):


I wonder if that first guy who walks through the door is where they got the idea for 3CPO in Star Wars?
 
You think those special effects were hokey, check these out (the front of the rocket ship looks like a flying pig and the sword fight was definitely pre-light saber):

Well, that was high tech compared to the first SF film in 1902:

 
I am not sure if any of you remember a Canadian series called The Starlost, it was a great premise, but very hokey FX.
Although it did star Kier Dullea of 2001 fame.
 
And now we take you to 1956:

FORBIDDEN-PLANET2-470x350.jpg


Forbidden Planet!


Note the parallels with Shakespeare's The Tempest?

https://www.123helpme.com/view.asp?id=17255

When I first saw Forbidden Planet, I thought the Id monster was the scariest thing I've ever seen.
 
I am not sure if any of you remember a Canadian series called The Starlost, it was a great premise, but very hokey FX.
Although it did star Kier Dullea of 2001 fame.


Speaking of 2001, it has long been denied as anything more than coincidence, but if you take the letters HAL and shift each letter right one letter, you get IBM.
 
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