I greatly disliked the first, detested the second, so I kinda gave up on this offshoot of the franchise. But I recently saw Beyond on Netflix, and I was positively surprised. It was not amazing or anything, but I genuinely liked it.
So when assessing the success of Beyond, it is good to bear in mind that previous films will have a lot to do with whether people are interested in seeing their sequels.
It's not a coincidence that a lot of the people who like beyond best are those who didn't like the first movies.
But on the flip side, a lot of those who genuinely liked the first movies maybe felt alienated by beyond precisely because it was too different and didn't act as a true respectful sequel of the narrative already established.
It's this difference between these two groups, and what they want to watch, that made it so that probably the opinions of those reboot haters who praised beyond essentially had the opposite effect on those reboot fans (hence why positive reviews couldn't automatically help the box office) Nimoy was right when he once said you can't please all the fans. You can't. You please one, lose the other or part of it.
No one is right or wrong by default, but beyond being the least successful may be just another hint that those who disliked the first movies were, after all, a minority; and it's maybe counterproductive to cater to that audience at the cost of driving away the very audience that made your first movies successful.
In either case, if people can understand a reality where there are fans who simply dislike the first movies, it shouldn't be so hard to equally understand that many didn't like beyond. And yet, it seems uber complicate and impossible to even imagine for some people.
Some here seem to essentially say that there is no reason why anyone could dislike beyond TOO, so the reason for its failing MUST lie in "other reasons" that don't contemplate giving to this creative team any responsibility for their own choices, their own product. Seems legit.
That sounds dangerously close to a conspiracy theory. I really don't think things work that way.
For whatever reason the RT stats aren't telling the full story, but the dropoff in engagement definitely says something undeniable.
Beyond being less successful than stid is an idea based on tangible facts that obvioustly don't take only rt into consideration, beside noticing a coherence between different results. People didn't like beyond enough, simple like that.
Conspiracy theories are mostly based on speculations and fabricated facts and manipulation..which is what beyond' supporters are literally doing now to pass stid as the flop that beyond, actually, was.
Everything provided in this thread (and others) to counterargue the evidence showing that beyond is the least successful (or that stid wasn't) is opinions and speculations passed as facts.
And really, I don't even like stid that much. Like I said, I'm the living example that debunks the "beyond got damaged by stid" argument. My issues with beyond have nothing to do with stid, beside feeling like it was worse in the aspects I already didn't like in stid. I can't even say which one of the two is better for
me, which would be irrelevant to the point
anyway.