Magicam

Magicam, Inc. was a relatively short-lived company specialized in building miniatures that was located on North Las Palmas Avenue in Los Angeles (Hollywood), California. The company, headed amongst by Robert C. King, Joe Matza and vice-president Carey Melcher, was a full subsidiary of Paramount Pictures, who created the company to maintain full control over filming models. Contracted at the start of September 1977, the most notable contributions of the company were the models built for Star Trek: Phase II and its follow-up,, most notably that production's refit-USS Enterprise (NCC-1701), initially in close cooperation with Astra Image Corporation, the visual effects shop of Robert Abel & Associates, before the latter was pulled from the project. "Even though we were a Paramount company, we had to submit bids just like any outsiders. We were expensive, because we're a[n] union shop, but they knew we could do the work.", Melcher clarified. (Starlog, issue 27, p. 26)

Upon completion of the bulk of the construction work on the models, a number of model builders legally moved over, as did the models, as model handlers to the respective effects houses, firstly Astra and subsequently Entertainment Effects Group (EEG). They also continued with detail work on the the models, mostly additional painting and applying further refined lighting and redesigned elements, usually requested by Douglas Trumbull, the visual effects supervisor.

The company was in existence from 13 February 1974 until 1982, when the shop was closed down and Paramount began using Industrial Light & Magic for the pre-production of, though, as of 2010, the essentially empty shell company was still listed as one of the subsidiaries of current holding company Viacom. 

Prior their involvement with Star Trek, Magicam worked on the effcets for the television shows The Space-Watch Murders and The UFO Incident (both 1975). The only credits of the company after The Motion Picture were Carl Sagan's Cosmos (1980, and that earned the company three Emmy Awards) and the The Greatest American Hero (1981) television shows. Upon closure of the company, several employees moved over to Apogee, Inc., that was also one of companies that worked on the visual effects of The Motion Picture.

Staff
Model makers employed at the time of The Motion Picture:
 * Larry Albright - Sub-contractor
 * Peter Anderson - Consultant
 * David Asher
 * Bruce Bishop
 * Brad Bluth
 * Bob Buckner
 * Chris Crump
 * Jim Dow - Model Shop Supervisor
 * Chris Elliot
 * Nick Esposet
 * Lee Ettleman - Machine Shop Lathe Operator
 * Joe Garlington
 * Kriss Gregg
 * Gregory Jein - Sub-contractor
 * Paul Olsen - Enterprise painter
 * Rick Gutierrez
 * Dann Linck
 * Carey Melcher - Vice President
 * Chris Miller
 * Tom Pahk
 * Richard Raynis
 * Chris Ross - Model Maker
 * Dennis Schultz
 * Russ Simpson
 * Dick Singleton
 * Mark Stetson - Model Maker
 * Zuzana Swansea
 * Rick Thompson
 * Chris Tietz
 * George Trimmer
 * Paul Turner - Model Electronics
 * Steve Wilson