The movies have always had a hard time exploring the "Trekky" stuff that the hard core fans like. The science, diplomacy, etc. Mostly because they've got two hours to introduce these characters, keep the masses attention while not alienating them with minutiae, tell a cool story, and get them out of the theater. Paramount, especially as of late, wants a property to compete with Star Wars. Star Trek will never be at that level. Star Trek does better on TV where it's got the time, and lower budgeting expectations, to explore it's themes.
The movies have always had a hard time exploring the "Trekky" stuff that the hard core fans like. The science, diplomacy, etc. Mostly because they've got two hours to introduce these characters, keep the masses attention while not alienating them with minutiae, tell a cool story, and get them out of the theater. Paramount, especially as of late, wants a property to compete with Star Wars. Star Trek will never be at that level. Star Trek does better on TV where it's got the time, and lower budgeting expectations, to explore it's themes.
Yeah. And I don't think there was as much grumbling about the storylines for Trek films while there was Trek also on the small screen. So I think fans were more charitable to the idea of films naturally being more action oriented and having bigger explosions. But since there's been like ten-year drought of small screen Trek there might be more expectations placed on the films.
I also also agree that Star Trek will never compete with Star Wars, but I do think it can do better than it does. I do think it can expand outside of a relatively niche market of hard core fans. As I've said in other posts/threads, they need a cartoon. Well received video games. And more merchandise and material. More toys. I think if they hook a new generation of fans it will pay off later. Even without the movies The Clone Wars and Rebels have had to pull in new fans, sell toys, and all kinds of merchandise.
I also also agree that Star Trek will never compete with Star Wars, but I do think it can do better than it does. I do think it can expand outside of a relatively niche market of hard core fans. As I've said in other posts/threads, they need a cartoon. Well received video games. And more merchandise and material. More toys. I think if they hook a new generation of fans it will pay off later. Even without the movies The Clone Wars and Rebels have had to pull in new fans, sell toys, and all kinds of merchandise.
What does it matter what Rebels merchandise is selling compared to TFA? It's all going to the same place. What I think Rebels and Clone Wars are are gateways into Star Wars for a lot of kids even when there wasn't live-action movies. Now the cartoons are icing now that TFA is out.
But whatever merchandise Rebels is selling its got to be more than Star Trek right now.
Cracked said:Did you enjoy that? If your answer was "OHMYGODYES!" then we're going to assume two things about you: You're not a fan of the original Star Trek, and you probably won't like what we have to say.
It's almost impossible to doubt it: Rebels still has merchandize on the shelves in places where Star Trek doesn't. What few Star Trek products are still selling are two or three years old; Rebels is selling out of things that just hit the market a couple of months ago.It'd be hard to separate Rebels from general numbers, but I really doubt it.
That's just it: they don't seem to be throwing money ANYWHERE. The best Star Trek products you can get these days are basically high-quality halloween costumes and "collectibles" from the Eaglemoss catalog. That's a pretty niche market that caters exclusively to hardcore fans.Again though, I'm not saying they shouldn't try necessarily. I'm saying they're not going to get anywhere by just throwing money everywhere.
Right, but how much of that is "it's Star Wars Rebels" and how much of that is "It's Star Wars" is more what I was meaning. Star Wars in general has always sold hot, even when they didn't have anything in theaters or on the air. Whereas Star Trek...not so much. I wouldn't doubt for a second that Star Wars products are outselling Trek at every turn, I'd doubt that Rebels alone is doing enough of the work for it to outsell. if we're talking just NuTrek, sure. I may have misunderstood and thought it was about the franchise as a whole. In which case, my bad!It's almost impossible to doubt it: Rebels still has merchandize on the shelves in places where Star Trek doesn't. What few Star Trek products are still selling are two or three years old; Rebels is selling out of things that just hit the market a couple of months ago.
There's also a matter of volume: four different kinds of light savers, nerf gun mods, lego kits, snapttight model kits, micromachines, costumes, tie-in novels. Star Trek's "Hotwheels" starship miniatures are now competing in a market SATURATED by star wars miniatures and models at various scales. The only way their sales could be lower than Star Trek is if they were bombing horribly.
Which by even casual observation, they're not. You can find ships from Clone Wars and Rebels and in FUCKING WALGREENS. Meanwhile Walmart has a Kirk action figure and a phaser from the 2009 movie, and Target's Star Trek toys is tucked way the hell into the back, wedged between "Men's shoes" and "clearance."
That's just it: they don't seem to be throwing money ANYWHERE. The best Star Trek products you can get these days are basically high-quality halloween costumes and "collectibles" from the Eaglemoss catalog. That's a pretty niche market that caters exclusively to hardcore fans.
Which is, let's face it, exactly how we got into this mess in the first place. I'd rather have Star Trek slightly diluted and kept entertaining than pandered to by corporate execs who don't really know what I want anyway.
When Kre-O is making anything for you, you need to rethink how you're going about it in the first place before getting really ambitious.
Useless.
Clickbait.
Heh. Cracked. All the accuracy of a ClickHole article with none of the humor.
Eh. As is often the case with articles from Cracked, the piece isn't nearly so clever as it thinks it is. This one additionally suffers the failing of getting too many things plain wrong.
Cannot recommend.
#4. The Reboots Have About As Much Understanding And Respect For Its Fans As The Star Wars Prequels.
Clearly not true. The new Wars movie is practically a highlights reel of the Original Trilogy jumbled up, put in a different order, and called a new plot. It's a love letter to the OT. The Trek reboot... not so much. Abrams is on record as having disliked Trek, saying it was too cerebral. Well, he sure fixed that.
#5. The Franchise Was Already In Bad Shape.
There's a lot of bollocks writing in the article in general, but this one stood out the most to me. Like that dig about not having other good Trek series to base the new movies on. Yeah, there's at least two great series they could have drawn from. The sixth TV series in the franchise was cancelled after four years. Most shows don't run four years, much less have the weight of 40+ years of other series, a dozen movies, world-wide merchandising, and dozens of series of tie-in novels behind them.
I think there is only one problem with the new Trek movies:
They are blockbusters (That's not the problem). They have ALL the problems of modern blockbusters.
Which is a problem for some.
Personally, I'm a fan of entertaining blockbusters. But there is a problem a lot of them have: scope. They try to be too big for their own good. Apparently the producers think if you throw 200 mio dollars at the screen, you need to threaten at least Earth or the whole universe. Or kill important characters for drama's sake. If it's a scifi-movie, we need to destroy a few planets or at least imply planets have been destroyed by the McGuffin before and now Earth is threatened (see: Trek09, Force Awakens, Guardians of the Galaxy, Oblivion, Prometheus, Interstellar, ...)
But the best blockbusters are a bit more small scaled. The Dark Knight is about a clown terrorizing a city. Mad Max is basically a gang fight in a wasteland. The better one's of the MARVEL Movies are more about personal relationships than the events surrounding them. And The Martian is about saving one(!) person. Those movies succeed because they have a more personal scope.
The new Trek movies don't get that. They are in good company there (next year Earth will be attacked at least 15 times in movies, form Batman v. Superman to a new Independence day...). Coming originally from a more grounded franchise, it's still disappointing.
I have no problems with plot holes, canon inconsistencies, stupid dialogue, fast promotions and all of that. And I'm perfectly fine with fast-paced action and witty banter. I just don't want to see them play so fast and loose with a whole universe (destroying Vulcan, killing Kirk, toppling the Federation...). I want to see them have the same kind of excitement on smaller, more palpable adventures.
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