Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country is one of my favorite Trek films. It’s a great finale for the original crew and it’s both well done and also not at the same time (I could do a whole thread on the numerous continuity errors within the film, but I digress). One thing I’ve always wondered is why the galley in the Enterprise is so beat up in the scene where the senior crew debates the use of a phaser as part of the crime against the Klingon Chancellor.

So…. Why is the galley so beat up?

  • RunningInRVA@lemmy.worldOP
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    8 hours ago

    You and others have suggested similar theories. Other commenters mention tight production budgets or reusing set pieces.

    I don’t get it though. The worn out effect is so over-dramatic and visibly noticeable on this one set/scene but not on any of the others. It’s like they played into making the galley look like a complete wreck but didn’t for the other Enterprise sets. Also the worn effect is not just one part of the galley - it’s the entire thing.

    Edit: also they refit the Enterprise in The Final Frontier. How does the galley get that wrecked so quickly but everything else is tip top?

    • quediuspayu@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      4 hours ago

      The galley is the only place that sees every crew member every day probably twice a day, it gets worn out much faster.

      It’s probably one of those things unnoticeable in real life but stand out on screen.