REVOLUTION HARDSTYLE
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.



 
HomePortal*GalleryLatest imagesSearchRegisterLog in

 

 Roddenberry

Go down 
AuthorMessage
taixyz1992
Pro Shuffler
Pro Shuffler



Number of posts : 401
Registration date : 2010-10-25

Roddenberry  Empty
PostSubject: Roddenberry    Roddenberry  I_icon_minitimeMon Feb 14, 2011 3:06 pm

Roddenberry had first proposed a Star Trek feature at the 1968 World Science Fiction Convention. The movie was to have been set before the television series, showing how the crew of the Enterprise met.[17] The popularity of the syndicated Star Trek caused Paramount Pictures and Roddenberry to begin developing the film in May 1975. Roddenberry was allocated $3 to $5 million to develop a script. By June 30 he had produced what he considered an acceptable script, but studio executives disagreed.[18] This first draft, The God Thing,[19] featured a grounded Admiral Kirk assembling the old crew on the refitted Enterprise to clash with a godlike entity many miles across, hurtling towards Earth. The object turns out to be a super-advanced computer, the remains of a scheming race who were cast out of their dimension. Kirk wins out, the entity returns to its dimension, and the Enterprise crew resumes their voyages. The basic premise and scenes such as a transporter accident and Spock's Vulcan ritual were discarded, but later returned to the final script.[6][20] The film was postponed until spring 1975 while Paramount fielded new scripts for Star Trek II (the working title) from acclaimed writers such as Ray Bradbury, Theodore Sturgeon and Harlan Ellison. Ellison's story had a snake-like alien race tampering with Earth's history to create a kindred race; Kirk reunites with his old crew, but they are faced with the dilemma of killing off the reptilian race in Earth's prehistory just to maintain humanity's dominance. When Ellison presented his idea, an executive suggested Ellison read Chariots of the Gods? and include the Maya civilization into his story, which enraged the writer because he knew Mayans did not exist at the dawn of time. By October 1975 Robert Silverberg had been signed to work on the screenplay along with a second writer, John D. F. Black, whose treatment featured a black hole that threatened to consume all of existence.[18] Roddenberry teamed up with Jon Povill to write a new story that featured the Enterprise crew setting an altered universe right by time travel; like Black's idea, Paramount did not consider it epic enough.[6][21]


Carnival in Rio
Home Security
Back to top Go down
 
Roddenberry
Back to top 
Page 1 of 1

Permissions in this forum:You cannot reply to topics in this forum
REVOLUTION HARDSTYLE :: Shuffler chit chat room-
Jump to: