No, Stewart wouldn't get nearly the same kind of attention - Picard's quite a ways behind Kirk & Spock.
I think that Picard may not be as well known as Spock, but certainly Stewart is as well known as Nimoy. Although I think he's really the only actor from the TNG era that would even come close.
It added a sexually objectified female character, but that was pandering to what it perceived to be the target market - nerds who like boobs. I love Jeri Ryan's performance, and like her character arc, but the addition of Seven as the new focus character was the point at which it was clear this was not a show that saw itself aiming towards a broad audience, but towards shut-ins who think "sexy" is a painted-on catsuit.
I guess I never thought of that as appealing to the fan base, especially considering how much complaining there was about the catsuits of Seven and T'Pol. So perhaps they thought they were appealing to the fan base, but in reality I don't think that was the case. I think they were just thinking that sex sells and it was a case of trying to raise already falling ratings. The problem came before that and is a lot more complicated. I don't think it can be boiled down to catering to a fan base.
What lackluster reviews?!? I really wish these inaccurate statements would go away...
Critics rated it a 7.6/10 and audiences rated it a 4.2/5 on 307,000+ ratings.
Personally, I am hoping they never return to the Prime timeline. It had its day and that day is over (and I can watch that day anytime I like). Some folks don't like Star Trek Into Darkness and the Abrams films in general. Which is normal. Nothing is universally loved. But I don't really see how the numbers quantify it as anything other than a critical success.
The movie was not as well recieved among fans. Its has a 7.8 on imdb below the 8.0 of the first ones. I dont want this to degrade to a analysis of how good or bad it was.....
I would still like to see more primetrek on tv or i would love to see a complete reboot of trek with no ties to any previous versions.
Star Trek shouldn't be about continuity and minutia. It's about ideas and characters. There can be 1000 versions of Star Trek as long as the writers and actors get the ideas and characters right. They don't all have to fit perfectly like a jigsaw puzzle.
Consistency is important. Continuity is important.
Voyager just kept fetishing that model of storytelling into the twenty-first century. It added a sexually objectified female character, but that was pandering to what it perceived to be the target market - nerds who like boobs. I love Jeri Ryan's performance, and like her character arc, but the addition of Seven as the new focus character was the point at which it was clear this was not a show that saw itself aiming towards a broad audience, but towards shut-ins who think "sexy" is a painted-on catsuit.
Voyager just kept fetishing that model of storytelling into the twenty-first century. It added a sexually objectified female character, but that was pandering to what it perceived to be the target market - nerds who like boobs. I love Jeri Ryan's performance, and like her character arc, but the addition of Seven as the new focus character was the point at which it was clear this was not a show that saw itself aiming towards a broad audience, but towards shut-ins who think "sexy" is a painted-on catsuit.
Seven of Nine's addition was the opposite actually - a blatant grab for ratings from the broad mainstream audience. The very same target audience that NuTrek aimed the stripping in the shuttle scene from Into Darkness at. So I don't see that as an example of Prime not caring about the mainstream.
Consistency is important. Continuity is important.
You'd be surprised (then again, maybe you wouldn't) how many Trek fans will take to the effort of writing a stern letter to Paramount every time a phaser has an off-set trigger assembly, or when an Andorean states they were in a certain quadrant when the could possibly be because the federation was in a meeting at that time because they read about it in a 1984 Star Trek Encyclopedia.
You'd be surprised (then again, maybe you wouldn't) how many Trek fans will take to the effort of writing a stern letter to Paramount every time a phaser has an off-set trigger assembly, or when an Andorean states they were in a certain quadrant when the could possibly be because the federation was in a meeting at that time because they read about it in a 1984 Star Trek Encyclopedia.
"In episode 2F09 when Itchy plays Scratchy's skeleton like a xylophone, he strikes the same rib twice in succession, yet he produces two clearly different tones. I mean, what are we to believe, that this is some sort of a magic xylophone or something? Boy, I really hope somebody got fired for that blunder."
Bless you, Sir! I've been trying to remember that quote for days!You'd be surprised (then again, maybe you wouldn't) how many Trek fans will take to the effort of writing a stern letter to Paramount every time a phaser has an off-set trigger assembly, or when an Andorean states they were in a certain quadrant when the could possibly be because the federation was in a meeting at that time because they read about it in a 1984 Star Trek Encyclopedia.
"In episode 2F09 when Itchy plays Scratchy's skeleton like a xylophone, he strikes the same rib twice in succession, yet he produces two clearly different tones. I mean, what are we to believe, that this is some sort of a magic xylophone or something? Boy, I really hope somebody got fired for that blunder."
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.