Didn't Wrath of Khan and the other original TOS movies all have pretty tiny budgets compared to most big blockbusters?
Some of his comments are ill-informned in terms of how much marketing muscle was applied to each film, and also how much a film has to make at the box ofiice to break even.Interesting line in this blog post on Axanar site about movie budgets and profititablity:
http://www.axanarproductions.com/quentin-tarantino-to-make-new-star-trek-movie/
I'd say it also worked out pretty good for The Search for Spock, The Voyage Home, The Undiscovered Country, First Contact and Insurrection.Yes-it was good for Wrath Of Khan (and ONLY for Wrath Of Khan)-not for any of the other movies in the series up to Nemesis. Making the Star Trek movies with the large budget provided for the 2009, 2013 and 2016 movies was a smart idea, and allowed them to do a lot more than what was done in the previous set of movies (Wrath of Khan to Nemesis); making the next ones on a small budget will only hurt the franchise, IMHO.
Sure. Except that there is no Axanar. So what Axanar proved is that - for a time - thousands of donors can be convinced to support the ambitions of one individual.Interesting line in this blog post on Axanar site about movie budgets and profititablity:
http://www.axanarproductions.com/quentin-tarantino-to-make-new-star-trek-movie/
^^^Sure. Except that there is no Axanar. So what Axanar proved is that - for a time - thousands of donors can be convinced to support the ambitions of one individual.
I'm sure Hollywood took notice.
They made that movie for what would be 30 million dollars today. That's low budget sci-fi territory. Sunshine was made for about 27.2 million in 2017 dollars. Sadly, in the current climate, you're only going to see a movie like that in limited release. (Make The Shape of Water a wide release, dammit!!!)Yes-it was good for Wrath Of Khan (and ONLY for Wrath Of Khan)-not for any of the other movies in the series up to Nemesis. Making the Star Trek movies with the large budget provided for the 2009, 2013 and 2016 movies was a smart idea, and allowed them to do a lot more than what was done in the previous set of movies (Wrath of Khan to Nemesis); making the next ones on a small budget will only hurt the franchise, IMHO.
Insurrection was the most expensive of the non-JJ movies, having about half the budget of Into Darkness when adjusting for inflation. Personally, from a purely visual standpoint, I think Nemesis got more bang for its buck, even though I do prefer the former over the latter.I'd say it also worked out pretty good for The Search for Spock, The Voyage Home, The Undiscovered Country, First Contact and Insurrection.
"The needs of the one outweigh the needs of the many"...Sure. Except that there is no Axanar. So what Axanar proved is that - for a time - thousands of donors can be convinced to support the ambitions of one individual.
I'm sure Hollywood took notice.
I think tighter budgets call for a lot more creativity, although not everyone can rise to the challenge. Rod Serling and Alfred Hitchcock were great at these - you can do a lot with musical cues, shadows, camera angles, etc. and they don't cost much - and camera angles cost nothing as you've already got the cameras and you have to use them, anyway. Shadows and funky lighting also cost nothing. Wardrobe has some costs but productions watching their pennies will have actors bring in their own stuff (like a married actor who needs to wear a wedding ring in a scene will just use his or her own) or scour the thrift shops.They made that movie for what would be 30 million dollars today. That's low budget sci-fi territory. Sunshine was made for about 27.2 million in 2017 dollars. Sadly, in the current climate, you're only going to see a movie like that in limited release. (Make The Shape of Water a wide release, dammit!!!)
Insurrection was the most expensive of the non-JJ movies, having about half the budget of Into Darkness when adjusting for inflation. Personally, from a purely visual standpoint, I think Nemesis got more bang for its buck, even though I do prefer the former over the latter.
@Everyone, I think tighter budgets tend to make tighter scripts, but it's a correlation, a tendency, not a guarantee. Going back to the Inception example, that movie cost less than Star Trek Beyond, but made twice the box office. (For all it's flaws, I actually liked Beyond. It's my favorite of the JJ-verse movies.)
Well comparatively nothing. Every angle change usually meant adjusting the lights and moving the camera, which costs time. And in the photochemical days every shot cost $$$ because film and labs costs were expensive, so they only printed the takes they thought were going to be usable (this is why you sometimes hear them say "save it, please" on the TOS bloopers because they're making a note to print the blown take for a goody reel)....and camera angles cost nothing as you've already got the cameras and you have to use them, anyway. Shadows and funky lighting also cost nothing.
A few (maybe only two) of them were salt shakers obtained for "The Man Trap" which went unused because they wouldn't necessarily read as salt-shakers to the audience. The rest of the similar objects were just machined aluminum made by the metal shop to match....The "instruments" in McCoy's medical pack were actually salt and pepper shakers that had such a futuristic design they weren't recognizable as such.
I always took that as one of Kirk's "antiques".A lot of people fail to recognize that Commodore PET computer on Kirk's desk in "The Search for Spock." It's STILL what I think of when I think of a computer.
No wonder they say "Melmac is really no place for cats".Day-to-day we dined off plates of the finest melmac.
TUC and FC had significant shortcomings. Insurrection was terrible. STIII/IV were decent, fun movies but neither aged well.I'd say it also worked out pretty good for The Search for Spock, The Voyage Home, The Undiscovered Country, First Contact and Insurrection.
Some of the sets and effects might have benefited from more money, but I'm not sure how much impact that would have. I'm not sure they've aged any worse than the first two movies, though. All four of those movies are products of their time, but I don't think their age makes them unwatchable by any means.Would ST III and IV have "aged" better with higher budgets?
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