Goodness gracious you all love to quibble and argue even when dead wrong.
Fact:STNG:TOS was shot and edited on film and was remastered in HD and the difference in resolution is plain as day. STNG was shot on film and edited on video, so the HD remaster took a lot more work since all the FX had to be redone. Again, the difference is plain as day. (Indeed, the resolution is so high that the flaws in the set dressing and makeup become painfully obvious.)
Honestly I have no idea where you guys get the idea that film doesn't significantly exceed SDTV resolution; just look at the restored editions of The Wizard of Oz and Metropolis to see how much detail film captured.
35mm & 70mm yes,16mm not so!
Due to the enormous investment in the large formats,they reached high degrees of sophistication,
16mm,on the other hand,was "the poor relation".
At any given time,the number of 35mm telecine chains throughout the world could be counted on the fingers of one hand.
The TV standard film format was 16mm,& the telecine chains,editing equipment & film processing were all for that size film.
The aim of television standards was to,on the screen,emulate the resolution,noise performance,etc,of a bright projected 16mm image.
16mm taken with a standard portable camera,converted to video in a telecine chain,& edited into a taped studio production,suffered degradation in the conversion,(Vidicons were nowhere near as good as Image Orthicons & the later Plumbicons)resulting in a strange inversion of real life.
Internal shots were nice & bright,with good resolution,whereas outdoor shots were dull & murky.
Note this was due to the less than stellar performance of the 16mm cameras,followed by obvious limitations in the telecine --not due to the VTR or editing.
Star Trek "the next Generation" may well have been mastered on 35mm film,but that does not logically lead to your comment.
No professionals produced prerecorded TV on VT until the late 1980s, when VT actually became good enough to retain decent image quality in editing (and even then it was rare in big budget TV).
Editing using film is a total nightmare.
What do you call big budget?
Major sporting events,(Olympic Games,International Football ,Auto Racing,The America's Cup,the Band-Aid Concerts,& so on),were all recorded & edited using VTRs.
Every large televised event was recorded,edited,& presented using VTR.
How long ago did this trend exist? ---well I watched the 1964 Tokyo Olympic Games in Perth Western Australia,long before there was any Broadband link between the Eastern States & Perth,let alone from Tokyo.
They sent the tapes by plane.
This was before the days of Standards Conversion,so NHK must have provided a 625 line chain,including VTR.
It was,emphatically,
not telecine!
Everything was on film, because only it had good quality. That's why we can watch the original Star Trek in HD now: you just re-telecine the film at higher resolution.
VT was originally used only to record live TV, which before that was either not recorded at all, or was recorded by filming a TV.
"Kines"(recorded by filming a TV) were regarded with some degree of horror in Oz,& were not widely used,as the start of TV in this country pretty much coincided with the appearance of the first VTRs.
I was lucky enough to see the old & the new.
In 1965,I joined a newly established TV Station.
Its original set up was one VTR,& three telecine chains.
Ads were hand spliced into movies & other shows,like "Gilligan's Island","Bewitched","The Addams Family",& so on,which were all 16mm
"In house" stuff was live,or taped,& material from other Oz stations was all taped.
I then went off to work on TV & Radio Transmitters for many years.
This did not mean that I knew nothing of what was happening in Studio practice,as a lot of information was freely available.
Even,so when I joined another TV Studio in 1988,I was surprised that the number of VTRs had increased to dozens,& the Telecine to one,rarely used,chain.
Many of the old shows were still shown from time to time,but they had been all transferred to tape.
As for why converted TV sucks: 25<->29.97Hz frame rate conversation is essentially impossible to do without artifacts. The 10Hz effect you describe comes from the 4.97 dropped frames per second. It doesn't divide evenly so you get judder.
This argument may have been valid in the 1960s,but our present system of digital TV didn't rise "full-grown from the sea-foam" like Aphrodite---many of the techniques used were available decades before,&
were used in Standards conversion.
(For content originally shot at 24fps, they instead run the film at 25fps, which then has no judder but does run fast and with a slight change in audio pitch, which I can readily detect in content I'm familiar with.)
So you are one of the "golden-eared brigade"?
One great advantage of digital TV is that very early newsreel film,at around 16fps,is not used in standard telecine chains at 25fps,
Seriously scary shots of the Imperial German Army lose their menacing aspect when they are all prancing along at a jaunty gait.
100Hz TVs solved a real problem. Those weren't boutique videophoolery, they were made by every major manufacturer of TVs. Many people perceive flicker at 50Hz. That is indisputable fact.
Indeed,but millions don't!
Millions more happily watched 24fps in cinemas!