A
Amaris
Guest
Jesus Fucking Christ, can we talk about Axanar please?
Do the Moderators even visit these threads any more? There's a fair amount of comments aimed as post-ers rather than posts.
For TOS, yes. But around the time of TMP he began shifting towards a grander and more idealistic notion and by the time he was back in the producer's chair for TNG he was all for showcasing his vision for a better brighter future for humanity.
The Butthurt is strong with this one[snip]
I can't fault him for that. He was trying to pander to what he believed was a powerful and loyal fan base that would be able to sustain interest in a new trek production, and maybe that would give him more room to maneuver in other ways. Somewhere along the way he was almost certainly touched by the way the fans found inspiration in things he used to think of as mundane "Just to put something on TV" storylines and decided that he should really do a better job because his work affected so many lives in a positive way.For TOS, yes. But around the time of TMP he began shifting towards a grander and more idealistic notion and by the time he was back in the producer's chair for TNG he was all for showcasing his vision for a better brighter future for humanity.
Roddenberry was touring conventions and colleges in the 70's and just co-opted the ideas being bounced around by fans.
I'm not entirely sure Star Trek became better for it.
Do the Moderators even visit these threads any more? There's a fair amount of comments aimed as post-ers rather than posts.
You can notify the moderator about a post that you think is in violation of the board rules by hitting the notify-moderator buttonon the post in question.![]()
Do the Moderators even visit these threads any more? There's a fair amount of comments aimed as post-ers rather than posts.
You can notify the moderator about a post that you think is in violation of the board rules by hitting the notify-moderator buttonon the post in question.![]()
I'm well aware of that. The fact is that I feel like this forum is often left effectively unmoderated unless someone actually complains.
It almost makes me pine for the good old days of the laughably quaint little butt-hurt over the scandalous "Queen Bitch Whore" nonsense. Almost...Jesus Fucking Christ, can we talk about Axanar please?
Nah, they's probably call him a tribble diddlerSo was Garth the King Cocksucker of the Federation?
Well hey if there is fur on the tribble ...Nah, they's probably call him a tribble diddlerSo was Garth the King Cocksucker of the Federation?![]()
Nah, they's probably call him a tribble diddlerSo was Garth the King Cocksucker of the Federation?![]()
I think it depends on the material. I think TMP was hit and miss, but it had some large, grand, ideas, that, unfortunately, suffocated at times under its own weight.For TOS, yes. But around the time of TMP he began shifting towards a grander and more idealistic notion and by the time he was back in the producer's chair for TNG he was all for showcasing his vision for a better brighter future for humanity.
Roddenberry was touring conventions and colleges in the 70's and just co-opted the ideas being bounced around by fans.
I'm not entirely sure Star Trek became better for it.
It almost makes me pine for the good old days of the laughably quaint little butt-hurt over the scandalous "Queen Bitch Whore" nonsense. Almost...Jesus Fucking Christ, can we talk about Axanar please?
And someone who specifically dislikes all of the work of a particular person, regardless of content, context or quality, is called a hater....Furthermore what if he did indeed mean all of Abrams' work? It still doesn't invalidate his opinion of preferring someone else's work over Abrams'. There are producers and directors and actors that people throughout the general public don't care for.
There is a difference between criticism and simple stubborn resistance to change. NuTrek haters -- and they ARE that -- fall into the latter category. They have no OPINIONS about the films, just a general emotional reaction to those films not being exactly like the old ones in some (to them) extremely important way.
I've seen both and evaluated them both as well. They do not objectively measure up in terms of quality with Prime Universe Trek, for reasons I have made clear in other posts.
I've seen both and evaluated them both as well. They do not objectively measure up in terms of quality with Prime Universe Trek, for reasons I have made clear in other posts.
There is nothing objective in a person's taste. If that was the case, "The Inner Light" would be the worst episode ever as I have objectively shredded it to pieces on more than one occasion.
People toss around "objective" in order to try and give their opinions more validity than they deserve.
Objectively, I have proven my point on more than one occasion that the Abrams films are some of the best Star Trek around.
Sorry, Dennis, but the evidence of history once again is not with you. Countless interviews and documents and audio commentaries on Trek videos all talk about GR's desire to produce a show that was literate as well as "action-y". Solo, Justman, Coon, Fontana, even Gerrald have talked about this in their interviews, etc.
In a battle of all those worthies vs you, I go with the people who were there and helped GR do it.
Most of the production documents I've seen stress the action adventure format and reaching a mass audience above all else. There are multiple documents from Roddenberry reminding people that they were making an action adventure show, not a social issues program like The Defenders.
In deference to CBS, we have removed the Star Trek branding from our website. and our Facebook page. We are also changing all emails to axanarproductions.com from startrekaxanar.com and we will be doing this sort of change throughout our productions digital assets. We think at this point Axanar has its own brand and we don’t need to use the Star Trek name. We are cognizant that we are using CBS’ intellectual property and we wish to minimize the use of that IP in our film and in our overall production.
Our move to eliminate “Star Trek” branding is simply going an extra mile to respect the entity which allows Axanar to be made and honor the Star Trek franchise we all hold so dear.
Read Cushman's books, esp the first one where he details GRs efforts to make Trek as literate as possible within the constraints of his studio mandate. He routinely sought out writers specifically with a SF background for just that reason.
Sorry, Dennis, but the evidence of history once again is not with you. Countless interviews and documents and audio commentaries on Trek videos all talk about GR's desire to produce a show that was literate as well as "action-y". Solo, Justman, Coon, Fontana, even Gerrald have talked about this in their interviews, etc.
In a battle of all those worthies vs you, I go with the people who were there and helped GR do it.
Most of the production documents I've seen stress the action adventure format and reaching a mass audience above all else. There are multiple documents from Roddenberry reminding people that they were making an action adventure show, not a social issues program like The Defenders.
Read Cushman's books, esp the first one where he details GRs efforts to make Trek as literate as possible within the constraints of his studio mandate. He routinely sought out writers specifically with a SF background for just that reason.
Once again, with feeling. Marc Cushman is not a reliable source.
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