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posted by Fnord666 on Friday February 03 2017, @03:17PM   Printer-friendly
from the true-cost-of-VHS dept.

Robert Meyer Burnett, the producer and editor of the bonus features found on the Star Trek: The Next Generation and Star Trek: Enterprise Blu-ray sets and long time Star Trek fan, explains why Star Trek: Deep Space Nine and Star Trek: Voyager are not available in HD or 4K Ultra HD and may never be in a lengthy interview.

Unfortunately, this meant, unlike TOS and The Animated Series, there would be no 35mm finished negative of TNG... and the series would only ever exist on videotape at NTSC resolution. The same would hold true of DS9 and Voyager. Enterprise though, shot in 2001, would be future-proofed, shot on 35MM and finished in HD, with the VFX created in CG at 720p, until the fourth season, which abandoned film altogether.

[...] TNG, DS9 and Voyager could not be rescanned and released in Full HD, as the original edited programs only existed on tape at NTSC resolution. With worldwide markets rapidly converting to HD, modern Trek, with the exception of Enterprise, would simply no longer be shown anywhere. With TNG still the most successful Trek series by a wide margin, Paramount and CBS desperately wanted to figure out a way to not let their crown jewel get thrown onto the scrapheap of history. Something had to be done.

So a radical notion was proposed...why not go back to the original negative and REBUILD the entire show, from the ground up, in High Definition? In the history of television, this had never been done before. Essentially, all 178 episodes of TNG (176 if you're watching the original versions of "Encounter at Farpoint" and "All Good Things") would have to go through the entire post-production process AGAIN. The original edits would be adhered to exactly, but all the original negative would have to be rescanned, the VFX re-composed, the footage re-color-timed, certain VFX, such as phaser blasts and energy fields, recreated in CG, and the entire soundtrack, originally only finished in 2 channel stereo, would be remastered into thunderous, 7.1 DTS.

[...] From 2012 through 2014, the seven seasons of TNG, along with 5 single discs (two-part episodes cut into feature presentations) were released on Blu-Ray, with over 50 hours of newly-produced special features. The restoration remains an absolutely astonishing achievement in the annals of television and anyone watching the new versions of the episodes, can only marvel at the vast difference from the originals. Everyone involved at CBS Digital and the various other Post Houses who participated in the project deserve a hearty round of applause from fans the world over. At least the fans who appreciate and understand just how much work was done.

Unfortunately, during this same time, the popularity of streaming services skyrocketed, and popularity of physical media began to diminish. Sales of physical discs dropped 10% a year across the board, the younger generation thought putting discs in machines was too 20th Century and even the loyal Trek fan base asked themselves, "why do I have to buy TNG YET AGAIN?" I bought the VHS tapes, the Laserdiscs and the DVDs, so do I really need the Blu-rays...? I don't even have a Blu-ray player. Won't it all be on Netflix anyway?" The absolutely justified high price-point of the initial Blu-ray seasons also didn't help sales.

Ultimately, the final result of all the effort put into the restoration itself and the newly-created special features were ultimately disappointing. The disc sales didn't match projections and continued to suffer as more and more people turned to streaming, where Star Trek was already widely available. Sure, the newly-remastered episodes of TNG have quietly replaced the original versions, but nowadays, very few people even notice, as they expect HD to look great.

Both Deep Space Nine and Voyager would require at least the same amount of time, manpower and money, but neither show was ever as popular as TNG or TOS. So, how can CBS be expected to shell out probably 20-million dollars per series to remaster them into HD?

It's a lengthy but good read that applies to all pre-HD television shows from the '80s and '90s. It also sadly explains why we'll likely never see Babylon 5 in HD or 4K Ultra HD.


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  • (Score: 2) by Gaaark on Friday February 03 2017, @11:23PM

    by Gaaark (41) on Friday February 03 2017, @11:23PM (#462655) Journal

    Okay, thanks!

    When it first came out, i had sooo much hope, 'cause.... Star Trek!!!!!, but then it all went sort of WTF on me, so i stopped watching.

    Maybe i'll skip to season 3.... hrmmmm....

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  • (Score: 2) by Grishnakh on Monday February 06 2017, @04:21AM

    by Grishnakh (2831) on Monday February 06 2017, @04:21AM (#463296)

    Yes, please, skip right to season 3. If you really want, you can watch season 2 too, but be aware that Dr. Pulaski is annoying as shit (which is why she was replaced with Crusher in season 3), and the show still hadn't really hit its potential yet, but it was better than s1. Season 1 was simply awful, especially the first episode (Encounter at Farpoint), and also the 4th (which was horribly racist, really surprising for something from Gene Roddenberry).

    3-5 were the "golden years" for TNG. Gene wasn't involved in the fine details any more, golden boy Wesley was on the way out (and wasn't so annoying when he was around), the rest of the characters had really fallen into place, and they had a lot of really great stories. But watch out because after a while they started running out of ideas, and then around season 6 it seemed like every episode was about one of the main characters going crazy. Then there was that totally wacky episode in season 7 where Data gets possessed by a bunch of personalities from an alien computer on a ship that looks like something the Mayans or Incans designed; really really weird and terrible plot but to be fair it did really show Brent Spiner's acting talents.

    Also skip the episode where Riker gets stung by a plant on some swamp world and then spends the whole episode having flashbacks. That one is really awful; even the episode's writer said so. I think it was in season 3, but I'm not sure. It was a "bottle episode"; the studio was restricting their budget so they came up with an episode full of flashbacks to save money.