Someone has already tried something like that. We'll see how the lawsuit turns out.![]()
Yeah, but he didn't try to buy Star Trek from CBS. Also, I would never make garbage like Axanar.

Someone has already tried something like that. We'll see how the lawsuit turns out.![]()
Someone has already tried something like that. We'll see how the lawsuit turns out.What we need is an insanely rich person who will by the rights of Star Trek from Paramount/CBS and continue to make Star Trek no matter what![]()
Wow it just about made a profit what a shame. I predict no more Star trek reboot movies, unless they sell millions in DVDS, bluerays etc
Buy, steal, tomayto, tomahto.Yeah, but he didn't try to buy Star Trek from CBS. Also, I would never make garbage like Axanar.![]()
That, my friend, is often a distinction without a difference.He said insanely rich, not just insane![]()
To quote voice actor Scott McNeil, "The difference between crazy and eccentric is how much money you have."That, my friend, is often a distinction without a difference.![]()
Agreed.We'll get a fourth JJ-verse movie, I think. I also think heads will roll in Paramount's marketing department. And CBS... What the hell?
Cough, cough e.g Donald TrumpTo quote voice actor Scott McNeil, "The difference between crazy and eccentric is how much money you have."
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It was advertised badly in the long term, it was disaster after disaster after disaster. In the short term, they did a decentish job but the damage was already done with the lack of long term hype or any attempts to promote the 50th anniversary that worked so well for Bond. There were about the amount of posters etc etc you'd expect from the movie, but nothing special - it just got a reaction, including from fans, of "there's a new star trek?".
I'll have to disagree here. There have been plenty of good movies with bad advertising campaigns, and vice versa. There's a reason why studios will spend so much money on marketing. Driving anticipation and excitement is important, an effective marketing campaign will get those regular movie goers interested in a movie at the very least. Example, with Star Wars people were asking me "it comes out in December, right? I can't wait to see it" With Star Trek people were saying, "wait there's a new Star Trek movie coming out?" The 2009 Star Trek movie built anticipation very well, and it didn't rely on pop songs to do it.The advertising people did everything in their possibilities. Beyond might be a good movie. But it has nothing to stand out, or differentiate it from other blockbusters. The trailers were a pretty good representation of the final product.
The only way they could have built "anticipation" would have been marketing the movie as something it wasn't. AKA marketing it as "a nod to 50 years of Trek", or plastering the trailers with pop-songs like Suicide Squad/Guardians of the Galaxy. That would have only led to even more disappointment, as the final product would have been nothing like advertised, or even worse, the studio stepping in and recutting the film to be more like the trailers (again, Suicide Squad).
Beyond didn't fail because of the marketing. It didn't even fail for a lack of quality. It simply failed for being rather bland, in an already overcrowded summer with many other much more anticipated event movies. People only watch 2-4 movies a year. If that year has Deadpool, Civil War, Ghostbuster, X-Men, Jason Bourne, Suicide Squad, a new Star Wars and what else not, people just don't have the time and money to spent on a movie that is simply just another Star Trek sequel.
I've already dis-proven this idea about the first trailer with stats. I posted 4-5 video sources of the trailer, and the only one where the ratio of dislikes was poor (even then it was 60% positive) was on the main video source. All the others were more than 10 to 1 positive for the first Beyond trailer (the one that was nominated for best teaser btw). The main trailer source was the target of a biased attack by Axanar supporters or anti-Jj supporters. Ths proof was posted directly to you in a response I made.
The tv ads appearing 2 months before the movie is a documented fact, and was reported multiple times here on these threads. I can saefly say that before Beyond, I had never seen a non-Super Bowl tv ad for ANY star trek movie before 3-4 weeks.
Marketing and audience awareness were not the problems. Release dates, and casual fans waiting for home viewing sources seems more likely. Maybe the "newness" has worn off and people just want to see it at home. The overall lower numbers for movies this year is so much lower that we may also be seeing a trend where people just want to stream releases they're on the fence about. Trek has always been "niche" and likely always will be.
RAMA
This is something I questioned before the movie came out on the tracking thread here. I now think maybe it had a fairly major impact...maybe not having that bump from 4th of July and Memorial Day was really a problem.
You DO realize that when a disproportionate amount of people state that the first trailer was bad (including literally dozens of people on this very thread) that it's not really up for debate anymore.
Bitching on the internet does not a majority make.
Bitching on the internet does not a majority make.
He said including. He also listed examples from real life. Read the full post before you post a reply.Bitching on the internet does not a majority make.
The comments to this article are mirroring what many are saying here. I especially liked this comment by Lugh.
It was visual chewing gum, wholly unoriginal and like all of these new treks, aimed at teens with no attention span. It's the kind of movie that's ten a penny at the moment. Is it any wonder the marginalised original fans have stayed away and the short attention spans have moved on.
Probably truer to say "Thor is popular".Hemsworth is popular.
My god she is annoying.I am watching Grace Randolph's YouTube channel.
From what I understand, Paramount decided not to push for the 50th anniversary thing because they didn't want to potentially scare away younger audiences. Remember, their advertising of the 2009 film was "Not Your Father's Star Trek", which to me has always suggested something of the studio not being proud of their earlier films. Maybe that's a cynical viewpoint, but since they didn't push for the 50th anniversary angle...the whole not advertising the 50th enough. could that have anything to do with CBS/TV trek Paramount/movies trek?
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