Has it really really come to this? People are now going to get singled out and crucified for merely liking an anti-JJ slag? JJ fans are THAT thin-skinned and on THAT much of a hair-trigger?
I'm sure your approval of the post's sentiment is the source of his mild amusement.
If I like this post, do I get a T-shirt?It's my new T-shirt.![]()
Rahul said:Well, following up 30-year-old storylines is EXACTLY what "Into Darkness" did. So there really is no benefit for the new continuity in this regard.
That movie was a retelling of an older story, not a resumption of an older one, and it was a combination of Space Seed and The Wrath Of Khan. Why don't people get that?![]()
It was a stupid post and you liked it.
How so? With the possible exception of the full impact of the line "My name is... Khan" I can't see how you a new viewer would be lost watching Into Darkness. The references like Carol Marcus and the separated by glass death scene don't carry the plot, to a new viewer they're just things that happened in the movie. It's not a complex plot to understand really, and it's fully explained for the new viewer. My wife's lifetime exposure to Trek was the 2009 movie and she understood Into Darkness just fine.How ever you try to spin it: the fact remains. It's a story that heavily relies on the viewers knowledge of specific plot points from 30 years ago.
How so? With the possible exception of the full impact of the line "My name is... Khan" I can't see how you a new viewer would be lost watching Into Darkness. The references like Carol Marcus and the separated by glass death scene don't carry the plot, to a new viewer they're just things that happened in the movie. It's not a complex plot to understand really, and it's fully explained for the new viewer. My wife's lifetime exposure to Trek was the 2009 movie and she understood Into Darkness just fine.
But, move onward to what, though? Prime? A new reboot?
I keep hearing the arguments to move on but then see looking back at things like at (insert favorite Trek moment here). Don't get me wrong-knowing the franchise's history can certainly bring some important information, but I wonder how they move the franchise forward? Because, I see the same old arguments come up if is set in the Abrams universe, Prime universe or its own universe.
1. Post-TNG: have everything Star Trek freely at your disposal, do change what you want, introduce new threats, new technologies, use the old ones as you wish, introduce new races, re-introduce old ones, etc.
2. Anywhere in the existing timeline (Movie-era, parallel to another series, prequel, etc...): Be seriously limited in your material. Don't introduce new things of significance that should have been mentioned in the already existing series (Xindi-plot), and be bound by continuity for each and every event/technology/character/race you want to introduce and need to try to fit it in the previous timeframe.
No new people won't care. But this series needs to attract the existing fans to succeed and many of them will care. The whole business model relies on people paying to see new Star Trek series; I'm not sure that there are that many people willing to do that who already are not fans.Do you really think any new people tuning in to this show will care about ANY of that? There's no need to be slavishly beholden to what came before, especially if you really want to create something new for a new audience.
This series needs to attract the existing fans.
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