To be fair, in the commentary for Episode III one of the crew members jokingly said they did throw in a kitchen sink. I haven’t watched the commentary for episode III in ages so I’m not sure if he was being facetious or literal.
To be fair, in the commentary for Episode III one of the crew members jokingly said they did throw in a kitchen sink. I haven’t watched the commentary for episode III in ages so I’m not sure if he was being facetious or literal.
I could see a kitchen sink being used for modeling/props in that scene but how do we know that particular shot contains the sink as opposed to any other shot?
I could see a kitchen sink being used for modeling/props in that scene but how do we know that particular shot contains the sink as opposed to any other shot?
Some more minor Tv Tropes autism this time on a funny cat and a show for dweebs.
The Twisted Tails of Felix the Cat was a 90s cartoon reboot of the classic cartoon character. The 7 minute short "Star Trash" is a light parody of Star Trek where Felix must stop a legally distinct version of the Star Trek crew from dumping trash on earth. At one point the Kirk look alike says "We are on a three-year mission to spawn sequels and spin-offs to exploit legions of social outcasts". This line was apparently enough to trigger a troper to the point of writing this:
Shallow Parody: A lot of "Star Trash" basically consists of cheap and mean-spirited potshots at the original Star Trek series, with the implications being that the show (and its successor) are hokey and pretentious TV garbage that only appeals to nerds. It even makes broadsides at it that aren't even true, such as depicting the ersatz-Kirk as being a reckless Cowboy Cop with an unusual way of emphasizing words (in the actual show, Kirk was usually a rational, level-headed and by-the-books Captain, and Shatner's unique way of delivering dialogue wasnt nearly as over the top as parodies make it out to be) and the joke of the Spock expy, Mr. Gleep, claiming that he's not unemotive, just "a bad actor" in particular is rather petty considering that in reality, Leonard Nimoy had much more versatile acting chops than his role as the rigid and unemotive Spock implied (including both in the show itself and the six movies following up on it), but he rarely got to show them off due to the inescapable typecasting he got from the role). While the jabs at nerds might have been relevant in the mid 90's (and admittedly can still apply to the more elitist or out of touch sections of certain fanbases), in light of nerd culture growing in the years after and eventually becoming a mainstream culture unto itself (with Star Trek itself eventually breaking into the mainstream and becoming a billion dollar franchise around the 2000s and still running to this day with shows like Star Trek: Discovery and Star Trek: Picard) its safe to say that this episode has not aged all that well, especially in comparison to other Star Trek parodies like Galaxy Quest.
Some more minor Tv Tropes autism this time on a funny cat and a show for dweebs.
The Twisted Tails of Felix the Cat was a 90s cartoon reboot of the classic cartoon character. The 7 minute short "Star Trash" is a light parody of Star Trek where Felix must stop a legally distinct version of the Star Trek crew from dumping trash on earth. At one point the Kirk look alike says "We are on a three-year mission to spawn sequels and spin-offs to exploit legions of social outcasts". This line was apparently enough to trigger a troper to the point of writing this:
Shallow Parody: A lot of "Star Trash" basically consists of cheap and mean-spirited potshots at the original Star Trek series, with the implications being that the show (and its successor) are hokey and pretentious TV garbage that only appeals to nerds. It even makes broadsides at it that aren't even true, such as depicting the ersatz-Kirk as being a reckless Cowboy Cop with an unusual way of emphasizing words (in the actual show, Kirk was usually a rational, level-headed and by-the-books Captain, and Shatner's unique way of delivering dialogue wasnt nearly as over the top as parodies make it out to be) and the joke of the Spock expy, Mr. Gleep, claiming that he's not unemotive, just "a bad actor" in particular is rather petty considering that in reality, Leonard Nimoy had much more versatile acting chops than his role as the rigid and unemotive Spock implied (including both in the show itself and the six movies following up on it), but he rarely got to show them off due to the inescapable typecasting he got from the role). While the jabs at nerds might have been relevant in the mid 90's (and admittedly can still apply to the more elitist or out of touch sections of certain fanbases), in light of nerd culture growing in the years after and eventually becoming a mainstream culture unto itself (with Star Trek itself eventually breaking into the mainstream and becoming a billion dollar franchise around the 2000s and still running to this day with shows like Star Trek: Discovery and Star Trek: Picard) its safe to say that this episode has not aged all that well, especially in comparison to other Star Trek parodies like Galaxy Quest.
with Star Trek itself eventually breaking into the mainstream and becoming a billion dollar franchise around the 2000s and still running to this day with shows like Star Trek: Discovery and Star Trek: Picard
Ah yes, both universally despised, with the franchise basically becoming a "shallow parody" of itself at this point. Meanwhile, Felix the Cat is remembered as a cute clock. Checkmate, Tropers.
Ah yes, both universally despised, with the franchise basically becoming a "shallow parody" of itself at this point. Meanwhile, Felix the Cat is remembered as a cute clock. Checkmate, Tropers.
There's even a youtube channel that just juxtaposes things people said in the original about society and the rules of various cultures and how they act in the new series.