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Pow Galactic Ambassador

Joined: 27 Sep 2014 Posts: 3739 Location: New York
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Posted: Sun Mar 21, 2021 11:11 am Post subject: Robert Butler |
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Director Robert Butler who amassed a large number of TV episode credits over his career (and is still with us and in his nineties), was hired by Star Trek creator/producer/writer Gene Roddenberry to helm the very first Star Trek pilot "The Cage."
Butler found the material crazy & nuts and questioned whether he should even tackle it.
Interestingly, Butler never understood what made ST so popular and why it resonated so enormously with fans. But he certainly acknowledged that the show spawned a franchise like no other TV series has.
Butler found the show too wordy for his taste. The square jawed characters were overly heroic and pristine, he thought. He wanted to rough up the Enterprise sets; make 'em look weathered and rusty. However, Gene would have none of that for his "baby."
Principal photography was scheduled to start on Friday, November 27, 1964, and finish exactly eleven days later on Friday, December 11, 1964 and budgeted for $451,503.
The reality was that it took sixteen days to shoot at a final cost of $615,751.
By comparison, the pilot for Irwin Allen's "Lost In Space" (1965~1968) was $395,170. "The Time Tunnel" (1966~1967) was $575,920. |
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Bud Brewster Galactic Fleet Admiral (site admin)

Joined: 14 Dec 2013 Posts: 17637 Location: North Carolina
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Posted: Sun Mar 21, 2021 3:10 pm Post subject: Re: Robert Butler |
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I knew nothing at all about Mr. Butler. Thanks for the into, Mike. And the information is very revealing.
Pow wrote: | Butler found the show too wordy for his taste. The square jawed characters were overly heroic and pristine, he thought. He wanted to rough up the Enterprise sets; make 'em look weathered and rusty. However, Gene would have none of that for his "baby." |
Clearly, the difference between Roddenberry and Butler is that the former wanted to show people what the future "should" look like — while the later wanted to present a future that the pessimistic, post nineteen-fifties public was beginning to expect!
Neither version of those futures is preordained. Mankind must decided which one to create. _________________ ____________
Is there no man on Earth who has the wisdom and innocence of a child?
~ The Space Children (1958) |
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