Doctor Strange
I'll Lock Up
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- 5,262
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- Hudson Valley, NY
Gotta say, I was pretty blind to the flaws of Star Trek: The Motionless Picture when it originally opened. I saw it twice the first week, and while it was pretty obvious that it wasn't exactly the best possible film that could be spun off Trek, it was downright amazing that it existed at all. And look at that gorgeous new Enterprise model!
Sure, it was a little too different from the series, and surprisingly badly paced and acted coming from an ace director like Robert Wise, but for a primordial fan like me, who'd watched from the first broadcast and went on to memorize the show in reruns, it was an absolutely unbelievable dream come true. There had been no canceled TV shows turned into big budget films in 1979. (Some golden age of TV dramas like Marty and Requiem For A Heavyweight had been remade as features, but no sequel to a series, much less a "failed" science fiction series.) It was an unexpected delight.
It even made me feel better about Star Wars, since it was obvious that it was its huge success and subsequent rewiring of the film industry that was responsible for a big budget, effects extravaganza Trek movie being greenlit. (Before The Empire Strikes Back really blew my mind with what Star Wars could be, I'd spent a few years explaining how Star Wars [it wasn't yet A New Hope then] - though wonderfully entertaining fun - was really a fantasy film set in the past, and wasn't "real" science fiction like Star Trek and 2001, which extrapolated our technology and society into the future.)
And yes, after Wrath of Khan demonstrated how much more exciting and satisfying a Trek film could be, there was a rapid re-evaluation of all the things TMP got wrong. But to assume that it was hated by all the Trek faithful immediately when it first opened isn't accurate.
Sure, it was a little too different from the series, and surprisingly badly paced and acted coming from an ace director like Robert Wise, but for a primordial fan like me, who'd watched from the first broadcast and went on to memorize the show in reruns, it was an absolutely unbelievable dream come true. There had been no canceled TV shows turned into big budget films in 1979. (Some golden age of TV dramas like Marty and Requiem For A Heavyweight had been remade as features, but no sequel to a series, much less a "failed" science fiction series.) It was an unexpected delight.
It even made me feel better about Star Wars, since it was obvious that it was its huge success and subsequent rewiring of the film industry that was responsible for a big budget, effects extravaganza Trek movie being greenlit. (Before The Empire Strikes Back really blew my mind with what Star Wars could be, I'd spent a few years explaining how Star Wars [it wasn't yet A New Hope then] - though wonderfully entertaining fun - was really a fantasy film set in the past, and wasn't "real" science fiction like Star Trek and 2001, which extrapolated our technology and society into the future.)
And yes, after Wrath of Khan demonstrated how much more exciting and satisfying a Trek film could be, there was a rapid re-evaluation of all the things TMP got wrong. But to assume that it was hated by all the Trek faithful immediately when it first opened isn't accurate.