TVH is very much Trek, and good Trek at that. It deals with contemporary issues (pollution and conservation) and succeeds in telling a human story without the need for a villain of the week.
Blah, blah, blah, but that's another thread.
Another thing that came after TVH was the medias belief that simply because TVH made the "most" money -- (Based on the unadjusted gross numbers) -- it was the most popular Trek movie. I think that impression has mostly faded by now and TWOK is presumed to be the favorite.
I wonder how many Trek fans on this forum consider TVH their favorite movie?
TVH is my least-favorite TOS film. Not a bad movie by ANY stretch...just my least-favorite and least re-watched.
Not really a fair comparison, as TMP came out after 10 years of no live-action Trek. And sequels traditionally make less money than their predecessors. The fact that TVH made substantially more than TSFS proves that it was a bigger hit than the two movies that came before it. And it was a bigger hit because it appealed to a new audience that the previous movies didn't.TVH made more money but sold less tickets than TMP.
Adjusted for inflation
TMP $278 million
TWOK $228
TSFS $193
TVH $245
TUC $152
TFF $111
This is pure supposition. You're assuming that your personal experience of TVH was true of every Trek fan. It wasn't.They sold a few more tickets to non Trek fans than the earlier movies, but they may also have lost some repeat business from Die-hards. I didn't see TVH as many times in theater as I did the first three.
There are tons of comedic moments in the first three Trek movies. From McCoy commenting that Spock is "as warm and personable as ever" in TMP, to McCoy asking Kirk "Would you like a tranquilizer?" in TWOK, to Kirk asking McCoy "How many fingers?" as he's doing the Vulcan salute, all of them have funny moments.It's only real legacy is that it introduced comedy into the TOS movies that polluted 5 and 6 with forced humor.
Ah. So only your opinion and your personal experience matters to you. You're just going to believe whatever you want to believe, even though the numbers you posted tell a different story. Got it.It didn't expand the audience if it was intended to and I don't care if it did or not.
Not really a fair comparison, as TMP came out after 10 years of no live-action Trek. And sequels traditionally make less money than their predecessors. The fact that TVH made substantially more than TSFS proves that it was a bigger hit than the two movie that came before it. And it was a bigger hit because it appealed to new audience that the previous movies didn't.
And on your last two entries, you've reversed either the titles or the grosses of Star Treks V &VI. Or possibly both.
This is pure supposition. You're assuming that your personal experience of TVH was true of every Trek fan. It wasn't.
And going by your own numbers, TVH sold $50 million dollars worth of tickets more than TSFS. That's a lot.
There are tons of comedic moments in the first three Trek movies. From McCoy commenting that Spock is "as warm and personable as ever" in TMP, to McCoy asking Kirk "Would you like a tranquilizer?" in TWOK, to Kirk asking McCoy "How many fingers?" as he's doing the Vulcan salute, all of them have funny moments.
And has been pointed out by others in this thread, TOS was a very funny show in its own right. Hell, even "The City on the Edge of Forever" has a bit where Kirk says that Spock got his ears caught in a mechanical rice-picker. That no more or less absurd than the "LDS" gag in TVH. And they've both got the same joke at their core: Kirk doesn't know the ins & outs of Earth history as well as he thinks he does.
The difference between TVH and TFF is that TVH had a story-based reason for its humor. It was a fish-out-of-water story. You'll notice that the bookends in the 23rd Century play about as straight as any other Trek film. TFF's big mistake was trying to graft humorous moments onto a story that wasn't especially humorous at its core. Because STIV was such as success, the studio wanted to see the Trek characters do schtick just like they did in TVH. The trouble is, without that fish-out-of-water story element, it just made the characters look foolish and/or incompetent. So you get things like Sulu and Chekov getting lost in the woods and Scotty knocking himself out on a low beam after bragging about how well he knows the ship.
By TUC, they course-corrected and the movie had about the same amount of humor as TWOK or TSFS.
Ah. So only your opinion and your personal experience matters to you. You're just going to believe whatever you want to believe, even though the numbers you posted tell a different story. Got it.
Careful, you posted a logical and thought out refutation of presented points - you're going to be accused of being offended, intellectually superior, and psychoanalyzing posters before being dismissed with a "blah blah blah"![]()
I'll take "Intellectually superior," though.![]()
I disagree completely that TUC was a course-correction. The tongue-in-cheek, wink-wink and even har-har moments in TUC are plentiful (admittedly not as bad a TFF) in that film, and really rip me out of the story. It was a story that didn't take itself seriously enough, and as a result doesn't have the dramatic impact on me that I would expect with a premise as intense as brinksmanship with the Klingon Empire.
But I'd like to hear what others think about TVH and the OP question. MIne is simple. Yes it's Trek and it good, but I don't think it's great Trek and I don't think the legacy of it was helpful to the remainder of the series.
I guess we'll just have to take your word for that, since you never bothered listing a source for your data.I did reverse the last two movies but the dollars are correct for all the movies listed.
You're right. That point is absolutely impossible to prove.Yes, I am guessing TVH sold more tickets to casual moviegoers and possibly less to diehards. That is obviously impossible to prove.
Well, sorry, I can only respond to what you actually wrote, not what you meant to say but didn't. And here's what you wrote again:I simply meant that I didn't really care if they expanded the audience or not or if were trying to, by making TVH what it was or whatever.
And what you wrote was that you didn't care if STIV expanded the audience or not. Not the same thing at all.It didn't expand the audience if it was intended to and I don't care if it did or not.
Gee, I don't know where I could have ever gotten the idea that you only care about your own opinion.this is just a childish attack that twists everything I said to make me seem something I am not.
And ah, yes, my opinion of what I like in Trek is most important to me.
...Yep. That sure is a mystery.My opinion matters the most to me. That goes without saying.
The translation scene was indeed forced on Meyer and Nichols hated it.
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