Full Circle - Shooting Star Trek Becomes a Reality
In a little over a week, we embark on a journey that seems to bring me back full circle -- to one of the important influences of my youth and my journey to here -- my love for the TV series STAR TREK -- now deemed STAR TREK: THE ORIGINAL, although this time it's for the Internet, not the TV screens. On both coasts, we have been working hard prepping the episode that will start shooting in less than two weeks. This will be the fourth episode of the 'second five-year mission' and you'll be able to see it on www.newvoyages.com as you can now see the earlier episodes and what the young cast looks like. My friend and colleague, MARC SCOTT ZICREE, has cowritten with another friend and colleague, MICHAEL REAVES, a brilliant Sulu-oriented script, which will star GEORGE TAKEI, reprising his role. Marc is gearing up to direct this remarkable script. It's his directorial debut so he has been busy seeking advice from many veteran directors he knows.
I have been helping out as script coordinator and am currently awaiting Marc's final touches so I can issue the yellow draft of the script.
However, this is also the beginning of another remarkable undertaking. We have now shot the very first footage of the Behind-the-Scenes/Making of... Documentary which I am producing along with Marc and TASHA HARDY. Today our videographer, WINSTON ENGLE, filmed Optic Nerve's JOHN VULICH putting on prosthetics to make actor JOHN LIM who plays young Sulu, look more like George Takei. Pictured above are these remarkable men at work.
Vulich has worked on such notable series as Babylon 5, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and Crusade as well as many others. By the time he was done with the face sculpting and the eyebrows, John Lim did look like a young George Takei. It was amazing to watch the process unfold.
While Winston was filming, I peeked inside the inner workroom and saw a sculpted body lying on a gurney. At first glance, it looked so real, it could have been a real body on a gurney. It was an odd visual to say the least. And foolishly I couldn't help but think, they should cover him up and give him his dignity.
2 Comments:
Thanks for sharing this. It must be amazing to be working on something that is so historic as another Trek series and something that is like a personal dream come true.
You go girl:) I know the project will only benefit from having you working on it:)
2:55 PM
Thank you, Stillhere for the kind words. I'm now back and will try to write something up for the blog as soon as I get some sleep. We had no internet service for 10 days, no TV, no phones in our rooms and only Cingular and T-mobile cellulars worked. Port Henry, NY is rural indeed. I was lucky that I didn't have to travel around in a horse and buggy, but even transportation is a story in itself. But not tonight.
9:32 PM
Post a Comment
<< Home