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When was CGI added to Star Trek?

When was CGI added to Star Trek?

2006
Cost-effectiveness by that time had reached a level that made CBS Broadcasting take the decision, in 2005, to retroactively apply CGI to Star Trek: The Original Series for virtually all its exterior VFX shots, resulting in the 2006 remastered version of TOS.

How did they do the special effects in Star Trek The Next Generation?

Star Trek: The Next Generation (TNG), which began airing in 1987, changed everything. TNG was still shot on film, but the footage was then transferred to video tape. As the series continued, digital tape formats also began to be used. This process enabled a new wave of video-based visual effects to be employed.

When did TNG start getting good?

Star Trek: The Next Generation Gets GREAT In Season 4.

Why was TNG Cancelled?

Paramount’s rationale for ending TNG was driven by the increasing budget for the series and the studio’s desire to keep the Star Trek movie franchise going. By the early 1990s, the films that starred the aging cast of TOS were waning, and Paramount saw TNG as the future of the Star Trek movies.

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Is TNG Season 2 GOOD?

Season Two is generally considered to be the worst of all the TNG seasons, and with good reason: there were some truly atrocious episodes. Of course, the Borg were introduced in Season Two, so it can’t be totally discounted.

How long after TNG is TOS?

Plot: Set 100 years after the events of the original Star Trek, this series followed Captain Jean-Luc Picard and his crew (Jonathan Frakes, LeVar Burton and Marina Sirtis, among them) on the fifth iteration of the Enterprise, USS Enterprise-D.

How much did the TNG remaster cost?

“Unfortunately, it wasn’t actually worth it. Sales of the extravagant TNG remaster—original retail price $118 for just season one—failed to reach CBS and Paramount’s expectations. A similar process would have to be done for both DS9 and Voyager—and would actually be even harder.”