Oh, the film will never be made.
But that was true a year ago, before the lawsuit started. This production was bleeding money for months.
Between scope creep, tons of small- and big-time conventions, , the 'biggest green screen evah!', and other unnecessaries, the budget, such as it was, was left in the dust long ago.
I am not saying they had to suffer, but that 'annual report' was a piece of transparency theater. It told a lot, and not a lot that was favorable to the production. Forget the salary and the vaguenesses, it also showed an inability to use basic Excel, ferchrissakes. It made it clear no one was watching where the bucks were going, and then they had their hands out a second time after asking for $650K. Plus add in the perk fulfillment issues that were cropping up. Donors at that time could not see it (and I am not faulting them, as they didn't have enough dots to start connecting them), but the lawsuit has turned into one big, fat excuse to not do diddly. The judge even told them they could go ahead. There is no injunction.
A year ago - September, October, November or so of 2015, the movie was already in the dust. It was already trampled by the rush to get a studio and a steady stream of income and a tax-free and work-free retirement fund.
As with all things Axanar this latest development is slightly confusing. Do we need to worry about the possibility of a movie featuring Richard Hatchs dinkle as star performer or not?
I wonder how Mr. Koenig felt when he first realized this was the facility built with diverted fan money.
Oh, the film will never be made.
But that was true a year ago, before the lawsuit started. This production was bleeding money for months.
Between scope creep, tons of small- and big-time conventions, , the 'biggest green screen evah!', and other unnecessaries, the budget, such as it was, was left in the dust long ago.
Oh absolutely. When I talk about getting carried away and ignoring the warning feelings I had prior to the Indigogo, this is what I'm talking about. When they posted needing $1.3 million it was obviously past the point where they knew what they were doing. The still-unfinished bridge set sitting in the middle of the studio was testament to it.
This is probably fodder for a separate thread, but there's something sad and cringeworthy of seeing the same small cluster of aging actors (or also writer/producers like David Gerrold, etc...) pop up again and again associated with something fan-filmy or geeky or satirical or nostalgia-retro. This low-budget scene really feels like it's become the next evolution of the convention-circuit. Whether it's legally actionable or not, it's a cottage industry that exploits past glories and associations with preexisting IP. While it can be done respectfully, it's all too easy to come across as schlocky, creatively bankrupt, or seeming to be motivated by little beyond the hopes of making a quick buck. Renegades and Axanar pushed the envelope more than they should, IMHO, but the worst offender is Unbelievable, by virtue of taking a Mad Mad Mad Mad World approach of just cramming the entire convention circuit into one movie which is Trek (and Team America) with the serials filed off via parody fair-use clause.
I mean, it was once a novelty seeing someone like Walter show up in a fan-film. What he did on New Voyages/PII was special. But to then proceed to do nothing but these sorts of things is really making it seem like he had nothing better to do with his time in the first place. Pretty much the living embodiment of the BBT punch-lines that were given to people like Brent Spiner or LeVar Burton, that they'll do anything for a little spending-cash or craft-services, no matter how humiliating.
As I say, a real pity as I'd have loved to have seen the finished film, but the people who could've made it happen walked out long ago.
OTOH, genre actors may have been trapped into shlock when they made memorable characters for SF/fantasy fans. I don't blame them for seeking what they can, and wish they could get out of the box.
From that article:Want to follow the money? We're getting closer, as Alec Peters revealed in yesterday's podcast that an audit of Axanar's books is complete and has been sent to CBS/Paramount as part of discovery. Also, AxaMonitor fact-checks Peters' new and recurring narratives about the lawsuit, Discovery and more.
![]()
^^^^Peters characterized the subpoena as simply, “show up to the deposition and we’ll talk about some stuff.” Among the materials requested in the subpoena were “anything we did that was inspired by Star Trek.” He said he would stipulate that Axanar is Star Trek.
Want to follow the money? We're getting closer, as Alec Peters revealed in yesterday's podcast that an audit of Axanar's books is complete and has been sent to CBS/Paramount as part of discovery. Also, AxaMonitor fact-checks Peters' new and recurring narratives about the lawsuit, Discovery and more.
![]()
And no, he can't take it back. It's out in the public sphere now (just not sworn to yet).
And on the third hand, there's a time when the majority of creative folks are faced with the most difficult question they will ever have to answer: when do you know it's time to give up on your dream? Nothing is forcing them to stay in the industry after their careers cool.
Many of those you see in the fan films are over or around 70. Koenig is 85.
edit: And can somebody quickly tell me what "LFIM" stands for?
If Alec Peters does this and thinks he can either 'win' the case - or win on appeal; yeah, he's lost it.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.