"a borg’s smorgas of lines here. "
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I groaned at myself for writing it.
"a borg’s smorgas of lines here. "
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To boldly type what no writer has typed before!I groaned at myself for writing it.
Up until the lawsuit, how good was Axanar actually going to be? The fabled "fully revised, locked" script director Rob Burnett declared last year was "the best Star Trek script ever," has finally come to light, and Jody Wheeler pens a review of the 105-page screenplay for AxaMonitor, in which he predicts how much people might've liked the film.
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I've said from the beginning that Axanar is the best movie that was ever written in the shower and story boarded on the back of a 7th-grader's History notebook.Still sounds like it'd be a steaming pile of sh*t. Where's the true STAR TREK that they kept saying would be in this story? Where's the social commentary? What does this movie have to actually say about war?
Oh, nevermind that, it has an entire third act devoted to more pew pew and hundreds of starships battling it out. That's Gene's vision after all, which makes Axanar so much more true to STAR TREK than any of the recent movies. So bring on the pew pew, the starships and more biting dialogue about shield percentages.
Peters, RMB and the rest of the Axanar camp are self-aggrandizing blowhards. Best STAR TREK script, my rear end.
In the meantime, they have fulfilled new orders placed in the donor store because, of course, that represents new income unburdened by any kind of accountability; the patches represent a lingering obligation for money spent long ago. I detail the situation here.
Still sounds like it'd be a steaming pile of sh*t. Where's the true STAR TREK that they kept saying would be in this story? Where's the social commentary? What does this movie have to actually say about war?.
I've said from the beginning that Axanar is the best movie that was ever written in the shower and story boarded on the back of a 7th-grader's History notebook.
Really? Nothing. Or nothing particularly deep.
There's the random "we'd rather be exploring" and there's that same scene they move around of a young ensign Garth meets in an elevator later turning up dead, so he reads her journal entry about the coming battle over a montage...but that's not real commentary.
If the film started with a great explorer becoming a great warrior -- and almost losing himself in the process, forced to return to the ideals he'd almost forgotten in order to really save things at the battle of Axanar, you can pew-pew a great deal and still get your Trek in. But that's no on display here.
The not-so-jokes about Garth needing to be perfect because the author needs to be perfect aren't that far off the mark. Giving Kharn visions and making him the more conflicted character just muddies the movie greatly. And when probably half the film is devoted to some kind of space ship shot, you've run out of room to do anything meaningful.
Vulcans walking and talking is not depth, drama, characterization, or conflict, internal or external.
It's the first unofficial, professional, independent fan film. Geez don't you go the meetings?!But what really gets my ire is the self-aggrandizing of this fan film — um, independent STAR TREK movie or whatever — as the "best STAR TREK ever." And it ain't. It's just fanwank with empty space battles, vapid characters, and dialogue that's trying to be more important than it really is.
I actually didn't know that part (or maybe I did and I blacked it out) but I think that actually explains a lot about that thirty minute pew pew fest Mr Wheeler described.Sorry for the double post - but its important to remember that Alec is a huge Warhammer 40k fan. The notion of hundreds of ships plowing into battle wouldn't be all that odd to a Warhammer 40k fan.
It's the first unofficial, professional, independent fan film. Geez don't you go the meetings?!![]()
But what really gets my ire is the self-aggrandizing of this fan film — um, independent STAR TREK movie or whatever — as the "best STAR TREK ever." And it ain't. It's just fanwank with empty space battles, vapid characters, and dialogue that's trying to be more important than it really is.
There is a story here, somewhere, buried in the inexperience and arrogance, and hamstrung by the 50 minutes of VFX that they've paid for. (Yes, there are more battle scenes than the 30 minute one at the end.)
The Klingon D-7 is the uber, menacing ship of the film. Starfleet is scared shitless of this class, as it rips to hell everything the Fed has. Yet Garth defeats one in the middle of the movie, without more than some minor damage to his ship. And with his major adversary -- Kharn-- not in command or otherwise involved in the battle.
Yes, they tell us Garth barely got out of the battle alive. But they never show us. It doesn't -seem- like there was any sense of real danger from that D-7. If Garth lost, that would be something. If Garth won, but it ripped his ship apart, he lost half his crew and he then had to limp back to Spacedock. And then he finds out that there's an entire fleet of these ships headed for the Federation. That's a story. With stakes.
Also, a big deal in this story is that the Constitution class ships are being built in orbit around Axanar. That's why the Klingon's go there. But very early on, we find out that the ships aren't really being built there. They are being built on Earth. So there's no real stakes in the final battle at Axanar.
You can actually have the ships under construction there so the Feds have to win: stakes. You can have the prototype under construction there -- the Constitution -- so stakes. You can have it be a massive deception, but the audience doesn't know this: stakes and, if done right, a Mission Impossible reversal on viewer. You can have everyone know it's a deception, but the goal and drama is to get Kharn to believe it and commit his forces there instead of attacking Earth... stakes.
If you really have a hard-on for the Enterprise being in this, then rip the shit out of Garth's ship and have him take the untested Constitution into battle...and the ship does such a great job they rename it Enterprise. Or take the damn Enterprise into battle and have it save the day, instead of cameo.
There's so much you can do to make this personal to Garth, to the Federation, to the audience. But none of that is done in this script, outside of the broad "This is our last stand."
That's storytelling. That's making the movie about something. You can have all the pew-pew in the world in that and still tell Trek tale about wrestling with your ideals when the universe says to abandon them.
None of that happens in this script. It's a fan film, written by inexperienced writers. There's nothing wrong with that. Just don't sell yourself as the Best Script Ever, take people's money, and insult anyone Not of The Axanar Body who says "Wait a minute...."
The Klingon D-7 is the uber, menacing ship of the film. Starfleet is scared shitless of this class, as it rips to hell everything the Fed has. Yet Garth defeats one in the middle of the movie, without more than some minor damage to his ship. And with his major adversary -- Kharn-- not in command or otherwise involved in the battle.
The eternal Borg/Death Star problem of sci-fi: You need to create an implacable foe, and then you must immediately find a way to easily defeat the implacable foe so the good guys can win and the audience cheers.
The eternal Borg/Death Star problem of sci-fi: You need to create an implacable foe, and then you must immediately find a way to easily defeat the implacable foe so the good guys can win and the audience cheers.
Not surprising, she wants to keep him on message.In today's deposition news, Terry McIntosh announced that Erin Ranahan, Axanar's attorney, offered to represent him pro bono at his upcoming deposition with attorneys from Loeb. He accepted, though he plans to have his own counsel present there as well.
It's an odd offer, given the huge potential for conflict of interest between Terry and Axanar. I'm trying to track down more of this story. I know Terry isn't the only witness to be deposed whom she has contacted.
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