First off, I'd go with the Enterprise from Trek (TOS to be more precise..).
There was never a ship that seemed to live/breathe when it whooshed by the screen. The lighting was always nicely done, played up more in the movie franchise and of course, Next Generation.
The Galactica suffers by comparison. I loved the original series in it's second half, when it left the 'star-wars-of-the-week' aura and gained more foundation with adding secondary characters, more fleet stories, etc.. 'Hand of God' is still a treat to watch. But to me, the ship itself never really looked real enough to have the aura the Enterprise had. Couple that with extremely rushed, 'final-minute' scripts, where the Galactica had to shoot rays at the planet, or launch missles out the side, etc.. You never really got a good sense of what it could/could not do. Again, it was a victim of rushed production.
The Falcon..? WHO didn't love the Falcon. It's somewhere in the middle, closer to the Enterprise. When I first saw it, I was so used to symmetrical cockpits.. ("WHY would you put it on the extreme side of a ship..? How would you see someone attacking from the other side..?")
But like most things Lucas did, it worked. I know the Blockade Runner was the original design for the Falcon, but we're all glad George went with a more distinctive design.
The original Enterprise. I also like the Enterprise from TNG (but not the "E" model that appeared in most of the movies). Otherwise, I generally always like the "bad guy" ships, e.g. Klingon Birds of Prey in particular, but also Tie Fighters and Cylon saucers, as well as the Cylon Raiders from the reimagined Galactica. And the Borg cubes - granted, they're just big giant boxes, but damn, they sure look menacing whenever they appear.
Edo, you magnificent contributor.. you reminded me of what I was going to write but totally forgot.
The 'bad guys'...
Perhaps even more a favorite than the original Enterprise is the beloved D-7 Klingon Cruiser. Matt Jefferies hit this out..of..the..park. Meant to look "threatening, even vicious", it's design is even more sleek and elegant than the Enterprise. I know it's look was updated in the movies and later, but just the original, unblemished TOS D-7..? My favorite of all time.
I recall when I started buying the AMT models back in the early '70s, my D-7 actually came molded in BLACK plastic. Seriously. I couldn't quite figure out how to use the water-slide decals on that (didn't think about just cutting 'em out and pasting them on with the paper backing...).
So when I got the later-released mini-trio (Federation/Klingon/Romulan) set, I naturally just painted my D-7 flat black, it was gorgeous.
Agree with Edo that the bad guys have the cooler looking ships. One of my favorites from Star Wars is the tri wing Imperial shuttle that I believe first appeared in Return of the Jedi.
I like the original Enterprise; I always thought the Next Generation version looked too ornate, more like a fancy chandelier than a ship. The Klingon warships looked really cool and appropriately menacing, in TOS and all of the sequels and spinoffs. The various Star Wars and Galactica spacecraft never made much of an impression on me one way or another. And, my judgement is surely clouded by nostalgia, but, IMHO, Gerry Anderson's Fireball XL5 was the coolest science-fiction spaceship of all time.
How about "Ship," from Star-Lord? That was a pretty cool starship to me.
My favorite, though, would be the Enterprise. If I had to choose one to travel in, that would be the one. Hopefully, they wouldn't put me in a red shirt.
The Millennium Falcon has always been my favorite spaceship. When I was young, I remember getting in an argument with my friend about which was cooler, The Falcon or the Enterprise? It actually got quite heated. lol.
I also really liked the Eagle from Space 1999. That ship was released as a toy when I was a young and I very much wanted it for Christmas, but I never got it. My friend got though, and I was very jealous. :(
Ohhh, William. Mega-agreements on the Space:1999 Eagle. Still my most favorite ship ever.
Quick Christmas story, stepping in the 'way-back machine' circa '75. The show had just premiered in syndication in September and walking into a five-dime store in December..., there was the Eagle model. My shorts may have remained dry, but otherwise I had a joyous, 12yr old meltdown.
I got the AMT Trek Bridge model and the Mego Green Arrow that year, but the Eagle model took the top award easily.
Easily.
About 10yrs ago I finally broke down and bought the 2 1/2 ft Mattel Eagle, purchasing custom hi-qual decals from a Canadian modeling site (JBOT). I didn't take the toy ship apart and respraypaint it like most customizers do for additional realism, I just left it looking like a toy as it was meant to be, but it's SO WORTH the investment. It's a thing of beauty, it's slightly bigger than the Kenner Falcon, I believe but I don't have the Kenner Falcon. A buddy when I was growing up had ALL the Star Wars ships so my Mom always pushed me over there to play (save her some good chunks of cash..).
Along with the fore-mentioned D-7, the Eagle is my ship of choice to cruise the stars.
The off-balance look of the Falcon is cool, but the design of the Enterprise was very innovative, combining the flying saucer and rocket ship looks. I prefer the original series ship, as the later ones looked tubby. Also I disliked in the later Star Treks how they would whoosh into warp...thought the streaking effect looked cheesy.
I agree with the Eagle from Space 1999. The Nostromo from Alien was very unusual, looking like buildings floating forebodingly through space. The Ark from The Starlost with its many biosphere bubbles intrigued me, made me wonder what was in all of them...according to Wikipedia, the ship was 320 km long.
Finally, I always liked the launching of the Vipers in Battlestar Galactica, and the joystick used to control the ship and shoot...exciting, realistic feeling to the speed and piloting.
True, the 1999 Eagle was übercool. I had one for a while, along with a deluxe Matchbox issue of Speed Racer's Mach-5. Both would be worth a fortune today if I hadn't played them to pieces.
Yes, we're kinda delving more into fighters/shuttles here., which is why I didn't go further into my preference of Galactica Vipers over Rebel X-Wings.
I love all the shuttles, from the Galactica shuttle to the beloved TOS Galileo, to the early Next Gen shuttle design (I had to buy the initial Galoob NG shuttle because I loved the sleek style of it so much..).
Lost In Space's Space Pod anyone..? Whaaat an awesome little flying craft.
Garett makes a good point about the Nostromo or the Starlost Ark: actual spaceships would not need to be sleek and/or aerodynamic. It makes me think of Blish's "Cities in Flight," in which entire cities like New York or Budapest lifted off and zipped around the galaxy.
Surely it's more a case of "Who's the worst starship"? Most of them are pretty cool to my mind - even the humble Jupiter Two (original TV version) never failed to look less than great flying through space or doing crash dives on planets.
Hey B Smith, for worst ship I remember Battle Beyond the Stars with "John Boy" Richard Thomas in the cockpit. His pilot control device was all rubbery, and wobbled around...looked cheap even to my boyhood eyes.
The Enterprise for sure. The original is genius, and the later models have all more or less played well with that design.
I well remember the advent of Star Wars when suddenly all space ships became overwrought with random details. It was cool for a while, but good design wins in the end.
Garett, thanks so much for mentioning Battle Beyond the Stars, which is probably my favorite bad SF movie. And yes, John Boy's ship was ridiculous: to me, it always looked kind of like a snail with breasts on the bottom. Here's an image of a model. Couldn't find any screen shots that weren't tiny or fuzzy. That movie was otherwise (unintentional?) comedy gold, even though it had a halfway descent cast who could have made it a workable SF action flick. Besides John Boy, it starred John Saxon, Robert Vaughn and George Peppard - who played an interstellar cowboy with a belt that dispensed scotch and soda. Also, Sybil Danning appears as a space valkyrie complete with winged headpiece. Man, I don't I've watched it since college; now I want to see it again, just to see if it's as hilariously bad as I remember it.
Friends, we've given a lot of attention to this, our baby. However, if you find a broken link in regard to an image or video, help us out by leaving a comment on that specific post. Thank you! -Doug and Karen
Karen's at Echoes from the Satellite!
Join Karen as she shares her thoughts on science fiction, film, music, and more!
Love Bronze Age Black & White Comics?
Doug crafted a year's worth of B&W awesomeness - check it out by clicking the image above!
Rocket over to Planet 8!
Karen has joined the ranks of podcasters along with her friends Larry and Bob on the Planet 8 podcast. Click on the image to hear them explore all things geek!
Even More Bronze Age Conversation!
Join Martinex1 and Redartz as they continue the Bronze Age conversations each Tuesday at Back in the Bronze Age!
Bronze Age True Believers Descend on Chicago!
On Sunday, 3-24-19, Redartz, Doug, Colin Bray, Martinex1, and Charlie47 represented our Bronze Age family of blogs with a get-together at C2E2 in Chicago. Great day!!
Bronze Age Babies, Unite!
On Sunday, 4/23/17, Martinex1, Doug, and Redartz gathered for a day of fun at C2E2 in Chicago. It was great to finally meet in person after years of online cameraderie.
Translate
Rules of Engagement
Welcome to the Bronze Age Babies.
We hope you'll find the conversation stimulating. Not only will you be able to participate in the day's discussion, but don't hesitate to journey into our archives and visit almost 2300 posts on all manner of pop culture.
We hope you enjoy our community. Please be aware that this is a TROLL-FREE ZONE. We'd appreciate if combativeness, prejudicial or racist statements, and general surliness be taken elsewhere. Here, we are free to hold an opinion and to be asked to argue for it -- but all in a spirit of respect.
Karen and Doug met on the Avengers Assemble! message board back in September 2006. On June 16 2009 they went live with the Bronze Age Babies blog, sharing their love for 1970s and '80s pop culture with readers who happen by each day. You'll find conversations on comics, TV, music, movies, toys, food... just about anything that evokes memories of our beloved pasts!
Doug is a high school social science teacher and division chairman living south of Chicago; he also does contract work for the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. He is married with two adult sons.
Karen originally hails from California and now works in scientific research/writing in the Phoenix area. She often contributes articles to Back Issue magazine.
Believe it or not, the Bronze Age Babies have never spoken to each other...
Disclaimer
We don't own property rights for any of the images we show on Bronze Age Babies -- those copyrights are retained by their respective owners. Most images are from books, etc. that we have individually purchased, while others have been copied from the Internet. All images are displayed here for the purpose of education and review within the "fair use" terms of U.S. Code: Title 17, Sec. 107. If we've used something we shouldn't have, please ask and we'll take it down. Thank you -- Doug and Karen
Dig Karen's Work Here? Then You Should Check Her Out in Back Issue!
BI #44 is available for digital download and in print. I've read Karen's article on reader reaction to Gerry Conway's ASM #121-122, and it's excellent. This entire magazine was fun! -- Doug
Back Issue #45
As if Karen's work on Spidey in the Bronze Age wasn't awesome enough, she's at it again with a look at the romance of the Vision and the Scarlet Witch in Back Issue's "Odd Couples" issue -- from TwoMorrows!
Karen's talking the Mighty Thor in the Bronze Age!
Click the cover to order a print or digital copy of Back Issue! #53
33 comments:
The Millennium Falcon. The Enterprise and the Galactica never made the Kessel Run in less than 12 parsecs.
First off, I'd go with the Enterprise from Trek (TOS to be more precise..).
There was never a ship that seemed to live/breathe when it whooshed by the screen. The lighting was always nicely done, played up more in the movie franchise and of course, Next Generation.
The Galactica suffers by comparison. I loved the original series in it's second half, when it left the 'star-wars-of-the-week' aura and gained more foundation with adding secondary characters, more fleet stories, etc.. 'Hand of God' is still a treat to watch. But to me, the ship itself never really looked real enough to have the aura the Enterprise had. Couple that with extremely rushed, 'final-minute' scripts, where the Galactica had to shoot rays at the planet, or launch missles out the side, etc.. You never really got a good sense of what it could/could not do. Again, it was a victim of rushed production.
The Falcon..? WHO didn't love the Falcon. It's somewhere in the middle, closer to the Enterprise. When I first saw it, I was so used to symmetrical cockpits.. ("WHY would you put it on the extreme side of a ship..? How would you see someone attacking from the other side..?")
But like most things Lucas did, it worked. I know the Blockade Runner was the original design for the Falcon, but we're all glad George went with a more distinctive design.
The original Enterprise. I also like the Enterprise from TNG (but not the "E" model that appeared in most of the movies).
Otherwise, I generally always like the "bad guy" ships, e.g. Klingon Birds of Prey in particular, but also Tie Fighters and Cylon saucers, as well as the Cylon Raiders from the reimagined Galactica. And the Borg cubes - granted, they're just big giant boxes, but damn, they sure look menacing whenever they appear.
Jefferson, of course.
Edo, you magnificent contributor.. you reminded me of what I was going to write but totally forgot.
The 'bad guys'...
Perhaps even more a favorite than the original Enterprise is the beloved D-7 Klingon Cruiser. Matt Jefferies hit this out..of..the..park. Meant to look "threatening, even vicious", it's design is even more sleek and elegant than the Enterprise. I know it's look was updated in the movies and later, but just the original, unblemished TOS D-7..? My favorite of all time.
I recall when I started buying the AMT models back in the early '70s, my D-7 actually came molded in BLACK plastic. Seriously. I couldn't quite figure out how to use the water-slide decals on that (didn't think about just cutting 'em out and pasting them on with the paper backing...).
So when I got the later-released mini-trio (Federation/Klingon/Romulan) set, I naturally just painted my D-7 flat black, it was gorgeous.
Easily my favorite enemy ship of all time.
Agree with Edo that the bad guys have the cooler looking ships. One of my favorites from Star Wars is the tri wing Imperial shuttle that I believe first appeared in Return of the Jedi.
I like the original Enterprise; I always thought the Next Generation version looked too ornate, more like a fancy chandelier than a ship. The Klingon warships looked really cool and appropriately menacing, in TOS and all of the sequels and spinoffs. The various Star Wars and Galactica spacecraft never made much of an impression on me one way or another. And, my judgement is surely clouded by nostalgia, but, IMHO, Gerry Anderson's Fireball XL5 was the coolest science-fiction spaceship of all time.
Matt Celis, you beat me to it. :)
How about "Ship," from Star-Lord? That was a pretty cool starship to me.
My favorite, though, would be the Enterprise. If I had to choose one to travel in, that would be the one. Hopefully, they wouldn't put me in a red shirt.
'Ship of Lights' from the original Galactica, anyone..?
http://media.aintitcool.com/media/uploads/2013/merrick/bsg-sol-001_large.jpg
Sorry, haven't gotten around to imbedding links yet.
I lean more to Moya or Serenity and the old gun to the head I'd pick Serenity. It had a grace and beauty of line that made it almost magical.
The Death Star ... c'mon, it has "Death" in the name - so cool!
The Millennium Falcon has always been my favorite spaceship. When I was young, I remember getting in an argument with my friend about which was cooler, The Falcon or the Enterprise? It actually got quite heated. lol.
I also really liked the Eagle from Space 1999. That ship was released as a toy when I was a young and I very much wanted it for Christmas, but I never got it. My friend got though, and I was very jealous. :(
I like J.A.'s answer- gotta go with the Falcon. My second choice would be the spaceship from Heavy Metal- "So Beautiful and So Dangerous".
"Good landing, man".
The Yamato/Argo.
Man, could that ship take a beating.
No love for the Liberator from Blake's 7?
Ohhh, William. Mega-agreements on the Space:1999 Eagle. Still my most favorite ship ever.
Quick Christmas story, stepping in the 'way-back machine' circa '75. The show had just premiered in syndication in September and walking into a five-dime store in December..., there was the Eagle model. My shorts may have remained dry, but otherwise I had a joyous, 12yr old meltdown.
I got the AMT Trek Bridge model and the Mego Green Arrow that year, but the Eagle model took the top award easily.
Easily.
About 10yrs ago I finally broke down and bought the 2 1/2 ft Mattel Eagle, purchasing custom hi-qual decals from a Canadian modeling site (JBOT). I didn't take the toy ship apart and respraypaint it like most customizers do for additional realism, I just left it looking like a toy as it was meant to be, but it's SO WORTH the investment. It's a thing of beauty, it's slightly bigger than the Kenner Falcon, I believe but I don't have the Kenner Falcon. A buddy when I was growing up had ALL the Star Wars ships so my Mom always pushed me over there to play (save her some good chunks of cash..).
Along with the fore-mentioned D-7, the Eagle is my ship of choice to cruise the stars.
The Falcon had...character.
I kinda liked the Twin-Pod Cloud Cars from Bespin...had the toy when I was a kid :)
Mike W.
The off-balance look of the Falcon is cool, but the design of the Enterprise was very innovative, combining the flying saucer and rocket ship looks. I prefer the original series ship, as the later ones looked tubby. Also I disliked in the later Star Treks how they would whoosh into warp...thought the streaking effect looked cheesy.
I agree with the Eagle from Space 1999. The Nostromo from Alien was very unusual, looking like buildings floating forebodingly through space. The Ark from The Starlost with its many biosphere bubbles intrigued me, made me wonder what was in all of them...according to Wikipedia, the ship was 320 km long.
Finally, I always liked the launching of the Vipers in Battlestar Galactica, and the joystick used to control the ship and shoot...exciting, realistic feeling to the speed and piloting.
Haha...here's a funny vid of the Viper launch.
Apollo Launches His Viper
Colonial Vipers were cool looking. I had one and my brother had a Cylon Raider, or vice versa, circa '80 or '81. Wish I still had them.
True, the 1999 Eagle was übercool. I had one for a while, along with a deluxe Matchbox issue of Speed Racer's Mach-5. Both would be worth a fortune today if I hadn't played them to pieces.
Neither are exactly "starships," though :)
Yes, we're kinda delving more into fighters/shuttles here., which is why I didn't go further into my preference of Galactica Vipers over Rebel X-Wings.
I love all the shuttles, from the Galactica shuttle to the beloved TOS Galileo, to the early Next Gen shuttle design (I had to buy the initial Galoob NG shuttle because I loved the sleek style of it so much..).
Lost In Space's Space Pod anyone..? Whaaat an awesome little flying craft.
Garett makes a good point about the Nostromo or the Starlost Ark: actual spaceships would not need to be sleek and/or aerodynamic. It makes me think of Blish's "Cities in Flight," in which entire cities like New York or Budapest lifted off and zipped around the galaxy.
The Millenium Falcon has a place of its own. It was so original. Depending on what angle you were looking at, it could be different.
The USS Reliant from Wrath of Khan. It was the angry badger of starships.
I always liked the Star Trek uniform fleet. It looked like a real navy.
Babylon 5, Star Wars, Battlestar Galactica (both versions) all really captured my imagination.
X-Wings have hyperdrive and qualify as starships.
What about that ship at the beginning of Space Balls?
Surely it's more a case of "Who's the worst starship"? Most of them are pretty cool to my mind - even the humble Jupiter Two (original TV version) never failed to look less than great flying through space or doing crash dives on planets.
Enterprise D from Star Trek TNG.
For me at least it has to be the USS Enterprise from the original Star Trek series. That design has stood the test of time after all these years.
- Mike 'whoosh!' from Trinidad & Tobago.
Hey B Smith, for worst ship I remember Battle Beyond the Stars with "John Boy" Richard Thomas in the cockpit. His pilot control device was all rubbery, and wobbled around...looked cheap even to my boyhood eyes.
The Enterprise for sure. The original is genius, and the later models have all more or less played well with that design.
I well remember the advent of Star Wars when suddenly all space ships became overwrought with random details. It was cool for a while, but good design wins in the end.
Rip Off
Garett, thanks so much for mentioning Battle Beyond the Stars, which is probably my favorite bad SF movie. And yes, John Boy's ship was ridiculous: to me, it always looked kind of like a snail with breasts on the bottom. Here's an image of a model. Couldn't find any screen shots that weren't tiny or fuzzy.
That movie was otherwise (unintentional?) comedy gold, even though it had a halfway descent cast who could have made it a workable SF action flick. Besides John Boy, it starred John Saxon, Robert Vaughn and George Peppard - who played an interstellar cowboy with a belt that dispensed scotch and soda. Also, Sybil Danning appears as a space valkyrie complete with winged headpiece. Man, I don't I've watched it since college; now I want to see it again, just to see if it's as hilariously bad as I remember it.
Edo, nice mention (and links) regarding 'Battle'.
First off, that ship..? Oh heavens, it looks like it should have been featured on 'Flesh Gordon', the porn remake of Flash Gordon.
And, umm, same looks true for Sybil Danning. Her 'groping-styled mammary support' on that get-up cracks me up EVERY time.
Easily qualifies as the 2nd Cousin to Leia's metal-cupped slave outfit in 'Jedi'
Post a Comment