Or was the thing i down loaded cut? The last scene was the backing out of the aeroplane correct?
Best regards
Peter

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I don't think it would have mattered. Remember, by the time the story was written the Writer's Strike was in full effect. Even if Ford had decided to do so, I don't think the writers would have been allowed to actually write another ten to fifteen minutes in.PHOENIXZERO wrote:It was rather frustrating, you'd think with all the money Ford tossed them NBC could have aired it with "limited commercial interruptions" maybe allowing then an extra ten or fifteen minutes and then just having longer blocks of what commercial breaks there would be left.
- Forgive me if I'm skeptical of this response considering that both Universal and General Electric take in vast amounts of money from their various other projects such as the home video/dvd market, theme parks, merchandising etc.Shapeshifter wrote:I mentioned this in an earlier thread, but it's hard to stay up on everything.
The problem wasn't that the script was short and they didn't have time to write another 10 minutes. Originally, the script was 90 minutes. They had to cut 11 minutes OUT of the script because NBC didn't give them enough money to make a 90 minute movie. They only had enough money to make an 79 minute movie. So, with 2 hours to fill, the rest had to be commercials.
Sucks, but there it is.
Maybe people lump the two together in their minds, but that has nothing to do with the intent of the entities involved. I can assure you, there was no intent on the movie side to make it look like a Ford commercial, and there was no pressure from Ford to make it so. The decisions to make the movie the length is was had nothing whatsoever to do with what Ford wanted. It was a decision dictated by budget, nothing more.victor kros wrote:I stand by the disagreements I've made. You say you can't lump the TV and Commercial productions together and yet people point out that they feel the "2 hour" backdoor pilot was in fact a two hour advertisment/production for Ford anyway. Based on the decisions involved on how the Mustang was shot, I tend to agree that when it comes to the car, it was in the same style of a commercial which further strengthens my belief in Ford's stranglehold over the production and length of the pilot.
I will leave it at that.
=VK=
- What I know based on the reactions to this question is there is no definative explaination to this question of why the 11 minutes were left out of the final product no matter how many ways anyone tries to spin it as a necessity.Shapeshifter wrote:I stand by the assertions I made, because it's what I heard. We go with what we know.
As you stated above it's what you heard which is speculative and subject to theory, so the only thing you can really assure here in this thread is your opinion on the subject just like everyone else. I believe based on those points it's fair to say there are no absolutions anyone can make about this inquiry only estimates.Any similarities in style would have been because the ad agency Ford hired to make the commercials had access to dailies from the shoot, and copied the style they were seeing for their spots. Absolutely not the other way around.
- Not really sure to be honest, depends on if they decide to listen to the fans suggestions or continue to do things the way they think it should be done and take a risk like Bionic Woman. Personally as a Knight Rider fan I would like to see them turn things around and make a better effort to make this feel like a continuation of the original series and give the Mustang more to do then drive around fast 90% of the time reving it's engine.Johnathan Kent wrote:Victor how do you think the Show will be shaped? in your honest opinion? just asking
- You didn't learn first hand nor did you experience first hand how the marketing and advertising was handled, how the script was revised and what Andron was asked to change to accomidate Ford's needs. You were not there in the editing room nor did you sit in on meetings because as you've said before you do not work for the studio remember? You would not have access.Shapeshifter wrote:I will say this again.
Based on conversations with people who were there, the reason the movie clocked in at 79 minutes was because NBC would not give them the budget to make the script they commissioned. That decision was an economic one, based on their own traditional budgets for this type or project. That is not speculation, theory, or spin. That is simple fact. A theory, on the other hand, is saying that Ford is telling NBC how long to make their shows so they can run more commercials. That is theory completely unsupported by fact, and is utterly ridiculous. Then you spin that by trying to denigrate the other side's view so that both have equal weight. They don't.