you're kidding right?Shatner would probably bring in more box office than Thor
Have Kirk hit by an aging weapon in the first scene and have Shatner play him for the rest of the movie.
This may be the case, but considering the box office returns of these Kelvinverse films you'd think Paramount would be serious about maintaining a tighter budget. So they may not be bluffing.io9's take and i agree/need it to be true:
"We tend to believe it’ll be the latter. Often, stopping contract negotiations and leaking information to the press about it is just a negotiation tactic. It puts pressure on the studio as fans go apeshit that two key actors may not return to the film. That’s probably what’s happening here—but we’ll have to wait and see."
they might be serious, but they might also cave now that it's public and the pressure is on.This may be the case, but considering the box office returns of these Kelvinverse films you'd think Paramount would be serious about maintaining a tighter budget. So they may not be bluffing.
If they can't lower the budget there's really no point in making this film because it's never going to do Marvel type numbers.
they might be serious, but they might also cave now that it's public and the pressure is on.
Doesn't matter from my point of view. These men have a net worth more than you or I could ever have in multiple lifetimes, and this idea of "you can never have enough money" is a plague that is destroying our society and planet. Unrestrained greed is a virus.
If they don't want to do Trek because it doesn't interest them, fine, but someone who is already obscenely wealthy need not try to get obscene pay. They should be MORE likely to take less because they are already so fortunate.
You don't know they're doing it out of greed. Robert Downey Jr. insists on lucrative contracts for his Marvel work so, among other things, he can make large contributions to charity and work on indie films at a much lower rate. In the music world, though with a magnitude lower amount of money (it was some decades ago) Bill Bruford would take drumming gigs that paid a lot of money every so often so he could finance small jazz projects that were not profitable, but dear to him. But perhaps they are greedy. So what? No one put a gun to Paramount's head when they signed the deal in the first place. Again, the world of big Hollywood studio filmmaking is NOT a charity. Moreover, your argument would make sense if the money saved from a reduced pay rate would go to some sort of altruistic endeavour. It wouldn't. It will go into the pockets of Paramount shareholders. What do they actually produce? At least the actors participate in the production of the entertainment.
I'm glad you know better than they do what they should be doing with their earnings. They negotiated a deal in good faith. They should get what they agreed to receive. Besides, it's California--a higher salary for them means higher tax revenue for the state, thus contributing to the general welfare of the state's residents (and higher tax revenue for the US government--same principle).
If there was any real chance the money you decry as salary to the actors was going to fund more health care for the indigent, or expand soup kitchens for the homeless, or fund housing for them, etc.--ok. But no actor owes a major, for-profit studio a "hometown discount" just so shareholders can make a bit more profit (and poor people don't own shares in corporations, so it's not like it would benefit the poor). If the choice is money to the performer (someone who provides labour) or money to the shareholder (who produces nothing), the performer should get it. I'm certainly not going to cry for the shareholders.
Also, the actors don't "owe the fans" anything either. "We" don't "deserve" to demand they take a pay cut to ensure we get "our movie". "We" are not a charity case either.
I'm not unsympathetic to the idea that some "jobs" are overly well-paid. I recall explaining to my mother, decades ago, why a hockey player make 5 times what my dad made working construction (at a time when the gap was much smaller than today for the respective jobs) and why the market is distorted in that fashion. I shared her sense of unfairness but also understood the nature of a market economy. Moreover, as exorbitant as athlete and entertainment salaries appear, they are, in percentage terms, far less than the revenue of their employers, so some adjustment upward from the days before free agency in sports and the end of the studio contract system for actors was warranted.Some good points. I ultimately just want a Star Trek 4 as a fan. However, these men should do whatever they like for themselves personally, even if I end up disappointed. I just think there is too much of a "you can never have too much money" mentality in the world. It causes so much suffering, though I'm not saying Hemsworth or Pine are responsible for that. Just alot of capitalistic brainwashing of "greed is good" out there.
or... Kirk Prime (time to dust of the original ST3 script)..
Chris Hemsworth was great as George Kirk. That being said they can recast the role. They got to get Pine back if they're going to make this a sequel to the three JJverse movies.
Meh, go with Matt Damon. He wanted to play Kirk b4 ST 2009
Quinto, Saldana, Pegg, Cho and Urban back with a new Kirk would be so darn odd!
It worked for Tarzan and James Bond. It worked for Bruce Banner and War Machine. It arguably worked for Batman.
The Yes 'Union' tour for example...Bill Bruford would take drumming gigs that paid a lot of money every so often so he could finance small jazz projects that were not profitable, but dear to him.
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