But he is needed in Star Trek Thirteen.Shatner is not needed for star trek 3.

But he is needed in Star Trek Thirteen.Shatner is not needed for star trek 3.
Cerebral science fiction. Cosmic, mind-bending themes.
Profound new ideas that make you scratch your head (in a good way).
Kor
Yes, can we completely get away from Earth/Federation being in danger?
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Star Trek Into LightflaresI want to see the crew encounter a cosmic anomaly that is essentially one ginormous lens flare; and it turns out to be the source of all lens flares in this reality.
Amen! Especially with Klingon battlecruisers!Cyke101 said:Kidding, but honestly, I've wanted two main things ever since I watched my first Trek movie:
-true exploration into the unknown
-a gigantic, balls-to-the-wall fleet battle
Cerebral is good, but that belongs more on a tv series rather than a two hour event that most folks pay large bucks to see on the big screen. (personal opinion only)
Cerebral is good, but that belongs more on a tv series rather than a two hour event that most folks pay large bucks to see on the big screen. (personal opinion only)
Well, I'm thinking something huge like 2001: A Space Odyssey.
Though that wouldn't fit with the first two Abrams movies.
Kor
Not as if it couldn't, though.Cerebral is good, but that belongs more on a tv series rather than a two hour event that most folks pay large bucks to see on the big screen. (personal opinion only)
Well, I'm thinking something huge like 2001: A Space Odyssey.
Though that wouldn't fit with the first two Abrams movies.
There would be a way to blend/balance cerebral with action to try and satisfy both sides of Trek appreciation....but it would have to be a cautious balance. After all, you can't please 100 percent of the people 100 percent of the time.
The big problem is that the first two of the Abrams Era Trek's are big budget blockbusters that did pretty well. A 2001-esque Star Trek movie with little to no action is not going to do the box office of the first two. It will only appeal to the niche Trek viewers and not the wider audience. A blockbuster will appeal to the wider audience (not necessarily the "lowest common denominator" as some will no doubt groan and moan), and potentially guarantee another Trek film.
If the Trek films were meant only to appeal to the Trek goers, with some effort toward a wider audience (like TOS and TNG did), the producers could lower their expectations for box office, and produce sequels accordingly, but again, with lower expectations.
But Trek has gone the blockbuster route. Nothing short of blockbuster numbers will do for returns. Sadly, the cerebral film doesn't fit into that view.
You could make a film on par with Star Trek The Motion Picture in terms of cerebral, or slow pace....it might do well in its first couple of days, but then word of mouth gets out....."It's boring." Roddeberry dogmatists might be happy, but there aren't enough to give it the numbers it needs to keep up with the first two films. ST TMP was a financial success, but a critical and fan pan. The same would likely happen with an overly cerebral new film.
Personal view and opinion only. Take with a grain of salt...or perhaps the whole darned shaker.![]()
There would be a way to blend/balance cerebral with action to try and satisfy both sides of Trek appreciation....but it would have to be a cautious balance. After all, you can't please 100 percent of the people 100 percent of the time.
The big problem is that the first two of the Abrams Era Trek's are big budget blockbusters that did pretty well. A 2001-esque Star Trek movie with little to no action is not going to do the box office of the first two. It will only appeal to the niche Trek viewers and not the wider audience. A blockbuster will appeal to the wider audience (not necessarily the "lowest common denominator" as some will no doubt groan and moan), and potentially guarantee another Trek film.
If the Trek films were meant only to appeal to the Trek goers, with some effort toward a wider audience (like TOS and TNG did), the producers could lower their expectations for box office, and produce sequels accordingly, but again, with lower expectations.
But Trek has gone the blockbuster route. Nothing short of blockbuster numbers will do for returns. Sadly, the cerebral film doesn't fit into that view.
You could make a film on par with Star Trek The Motion Picture in terms of cerebral, or slow pace....it might do well in its first couple of days, but then word of mouth gets out....."It's boring." Roddeberry dogmatists might be happy, but there aren't enough to give it the numbers it needs to keep up with the first two films. ST TMP was a financial success, but a critical and fan pan. The same would likely happen with an overly cerebral new film.
Personal view and opinion only. Take with a grain of salt...or perhaps the whole darned shaker.![]()
Totally agree, as much as I love The Motion Picture, you don't hire the director of The Fast and the Furious movies if you want a slow, talky sci-fi epic. These movies are blockbuster-Trek and I'm fine with that. We may never see this level of cash thrown at big screen Trek again, so I go into these movies wanting 2 hours of balls-out visually stunning entertainment, and so far the new films have delivered just that.
I also think they need to put McCoy in the next one way more and bring the famous Spock/McCoy battles back. Im tired of the new big three of Kirk,Spock and Uhura. Uhura brings nothing to trio.
Maybe it's the difference between arguing and bickering/one-ups-manship. If there is going to be a multi-year in-universe gap from the last movie to the next, the character of Kirk could be seen to have matured and the arguing with Spock subsides, and there could be less of a adversary relationship, and even more of a partnership.how can tos McCoy fit in this 'trio' when reboot Kirk essentially has his role already? He's the one who has arguments with Spock about logic vs emotion, he's the one with the banter with Spock.I also think they need to put McCoy in the next one way more and bring the famous Spock/McCoy battles back. Im tired of the new big three of Kirk,Spock and Uhura. Uhura brings nothing to trio.
I don't want to see Shatner as Old Kirk, but I would like to see him as Tiberius Kirk, grandfather of James.
Crewman: (as Shatner steps on the Enterprise) I'm sorry, sir. Who are you?
Shatner: I'm Kirk. T. Kirk.
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Maybe it's the difference between arguing and bickering/one-ups-manship. If there is going to be a multi-year in-universe gap from the last movie to the next, the character of Kirk could be seen to have matured and the arguing with Spock subsides, and there could be less of a adversary relationship, and even more of a partnership.how can tos McCoy fit in this 'trio' when reboot Kirk essentially has his role already? He's the one who has arguments with Spock about logic vs emotion, he's the one with the banter with Spock.I also think they need to put McCoy in the next one way more and bring the famous Spock/McCoy battles back. Im tired of the new big three of Kirk,Spock and Uhura. Uhura brings nothing to trio.
If they also lose (please please) the aspect of Uhura being the high maintenance bitchy girlfriend then in a somewhat strange way McCoy could take over that role, pointing out Spock's flaws, mistakes and pushing him with points of view that he obviously doesn't see. Which would be a return to a form of the friendship they shared in the original series.
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