I wonder if superhero movies will suffer from the same glut as Trek did in the 90s? That's the advantage of just having one movie every few years - it's more of an event. It's the pause that refreshes!I do not think it will bomb too, we never know but 90% chance that it wont bomb. Also seeing how Jurassic park and furious 7 made so much money people make be looking for better alternatives to the 5 comics films coming out in the spring summer period alone and star trek beyond will be just what people need.![]()
Superhero movies are a lot more diverse than 90s trek was. If people get too tired of one thing, the genre will just shift slightly in a different direction. At worst, maybe one of the major studios will cut down or eliminate production in the genre, but the genre as a whole won't be disappearing anytime soon. Probably not ever.
I don't see how STB can truly flop. At worst it might "disappoint" alla STID, but it'll make its money back. Unlike the Spiderman reboot, I think there is a lot of good will toward these actors as these characters, and the general sense of fun the NuTrek movies have had so far. I imagine that the tagline "From the director of Fast & Furious" will put an extra $30 mil in the box office on its own.
If there is a perceived need to "re-tool", I don't think they'll do more than get a new director, maybe do some stunt-casting, and make a big deal about how the new one won't have whatever the marketing people say was wrong with the old one (no talking frogs! less of the colour orange!). Actually, that's what they're doing with the current one...
I'm pretty sure that a flop would reduce the chances of Trek returning to TV, not increase them. Possibly a canny producer might see an opportunity to get a Clone Wars-style show to market.
Any movie can flop under the right (or rather, wrong) circumstances. But I agree this one seems exceedingly unlikely. I also agree the end of the nuTrek films won't in any way 'help' get ST back on television. That probably isn't going to happen until someone with a real vision for a series manages to gain some influence at the studio, regardless of what state the franchise is in. (Or until someone comes up with a way to do a great looking Star Trek show for ridiculously cheap)