As a franchise, Star Trek doesn’t use Dutch angles fairly often. The primary motive for that is, as talked about earlier than, that producers need episodes to have a type of uniform look, one thing that was notably vital as soon as the present hit syndication. Moreover, Dutch angles are generally overused by unhealthy administrators, so using them can draw the unsuitable type of consideration to any given episode.
That’s a lesson that Star Trek director David Livingston discovered about Dutch angles the exhausting means whereas engaged on the Voyager episode “Emanations.” The episode had an attention-grabbing gimmick the place Harry Kim apparently died, waking up in an alien world the place the residents deal with him as a customer from their afterlife. For the director, this offered the problem of determining the easiest way to make the alien world look very completely different from what we usually see within the present.