Susan Sackett
Author of Letters to Star Trek
About the Author
Works by Susan Sackett
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1943-12-18
- Gender
- female
- Education
- University of Florida (BA, Education|1964)
University of Florida (MA, Education|1965) - Occupations
- author
screenwriter
teacher
personal assistant
production assistant - Organizations
- National Broadcasting Company
American Humanist Association
Mensa International
Academy of Television Arts and Sciences
Writers Guild of America
Humanists International - Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- New York, New York, USA
- Places of residence
- Connecticut, USA
Miami, Florida, USA
Los Angeles, California, USA
Scottsdale, Arizona, USA - Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
In The Making of "Star Trek: The Motion Picture", Susan Sackett and Gene Roddenberry continue what Stephen E. Whitfield began with his Making of "Star Trek". Sackett and Roddenberry begin with the work to revitalize interest in Star Trek, the initial plan to make a movie, the switch to make a sequel television series (which was to be titled Star Trek: Phase II), and the switch back to a feature film following the success of Star Wars and Close Encounters of the Third Kind. As production on show more Phase II had already begun, Roddenberry and the rest of the production had to scale up to the demands of a film and rework plot elements of the abortive series into the movie. The book explores the writing of the script, the reunion of the original cast and casting of new actors, the creation of makeup, props, and special effects, as well as the challenges in realizing Roddenberry and director Robert Wise's vision. The Making of "Star Trek: The Motion Picture" is an interesting volume, covering not just the making of this particular film, but offering insight into film-making in general. Unfortunately, Sackett and Roddenberry were writing while the film was still in post-production, and could not yet know about the reception of the film or its place in the later franchise. Star Trek: The Motion Picture was flawed as it attempted to scale up from a television series to a film, but it still captures the optimism and hope of the original series, unlike sequels Star Trek V: The Final Frontier (which derived its plot from an early story idea for The Motion Picture) and Star Trek Into Darkness. With that caveat in mind, this will appeal to both Trek fans and those interested in film-making. show less
A 1979 compilation of quotations from the original Star Trek. There are a few classics in here, but mostly these were selected not for being memorable or pithy, but for being "philosophical," or for fitting vague themes like "love" and "humanity." Out of context, many of them come across as pretentious. Or pointless. Or possibly both. Not really worth seeking out, even for serious Trek fans, except maybe as a completist collector's item.
Over some seventy-one episodes, “Star Trek” advanced various insights to a legion of enthused viewers. Speaking about the society of the day, about life and death, about the human condition, it offered its universal perceptions in a way that television had never before embraced.
Within the pages of this little tome are the pearls of wisdom dispensed via the episodes aired during the show’s original three-year run. If you’re looking for a specific quote, the appendix offers them show more catalogued by episode. It a pleasant trip down memory lane, complete with pictures from the show.
Highly recommended. show less
Within the pages of this little tome are the pearls of wisdom dispensed via the episodes aired during the show’s original three-year run. If you’re looking for a specific quote, the appendix offers them show more catalogued by episode. It a pleasant trip down memory lane, complete with pictures from the show.
Highly recommended. show less
Fascinating.
Written during the planning phase of the first Movie, very self-laudatory. Not really all that much information, the kind I expected given in form letters to the FAQs. But still so very interesting, to see how fandom operated before the internet. And how network TV worked, too. Especially in the beginning of the book. And near the end of the book Roddenberry spells out some of his ideas, and they, too, are fascinating.
"Being a Star Trek nut takes a lot of work. It means hours of show more article cutting, perusing bookstores, stalking stores and building models."
An excerpt from [b:A Sleep of Prisoners|1287027|A Sleep of Prisoners|Christopher Fry|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1182518700l/1287027._SY75_.jpg|1276100] by [a:Christopher Fry|222935|Christopher Fry|https://images.gr-assets.com/authors/1316506530p2/222935.jpg]:
"This is no winter now; the frozen misery of centuries breaks, cracks, begins to move;
the thunder is the thunder of the floes, the thaw, the flood, the upstart spring.
Thank God our time is now, when wrong comes up to face us everywhere,
never to leave us till we take
the longest stride of soul men ever took.
Affairs are now soul size.
The enterprise
is exploration into God. show less
Written during the planning phase of the first Movie, very self-laudatory. Not really all that much information, the kind I expected given in form letters to the FAQs. But still so very interesting, to see how fandom operated before the internet. And how network TV worked, too. Especially in the beginning of the book. And near the end of the book Roddenberry spells out some of his ideas, and they, too, are fascinating.
"Being a Star Trek nut takes a lot of work. It means hours of show more article cutting, perusing bookstores, stalking stores and building models."
An excerpt from [b:A Sleep of Prisoners|1287027|A Sleep of Prisoners|Christopher Fry|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1182518700l/1287027._SY75_.jpg|1276100] by [a:Christopher Fry|222935|Christopher Fry|https://images.gr-assets.com/authors/1316506530p2/222935.jpg]:
"This is no winter now; the frozen misery of centuries breaks, cracks, begins to move;
the thunder is the thunder of the floes, the thaw, the flood, the upstart spring.
Thank God our time is now, when wrong comes up to face us everywhere,
never to leave us till we take
the longest stride of soul men ever took.
Affairs are now soul size.
The enterprise
is exploration into God. show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 21
- Members
- 570
- Popularity
- #43,913
- Rating
- 3.5
- Reviews
- 6
- ISBNs
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