• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Star Trek 4 Reportedly Shelved

Disagree. For the 50th anniversary, a Shatner-Nimoy reunion would have appealed to every Trekkie across generations.

Except for the tiny, little complication that Leonard Nimoy died in February 2015. He was also in very poor health for the year or so leading up to that and he wasn't on speaking terms with William Shatner at all for the last five years of his life. A Shatner-Nimoy Reunion for the 50th Anniversary wouldn't have happened regardless of whatever was happening on Bad Robot's end.
 
I'm not torn up about this. I think we got three mostly solid films, that all have some re-watch value. The Kelvin films kept the Trek flame alive at a very dire time for the franchise, and for a brief moment, in 2009, made Trek cool among the masses in a way it hadn't been in about 20 years, or reaching further back, to the 1960s. As much as I had issues with Into Darkness, I can't deny it's box office success and how it tapped into a worldwide audience. Unfortunately didn't really build on that with Beyond (which wasn't a bad film, but I can't say it was a film that would be the topic around the proverbial water cooler either, and it didn't help that the commercials ruined the twist with Krall).

I don't know where else the Kelvin universe can go at this point but down. I think Into Darkness was a setback creatively, and in terms of momentum, that the Kelvinverse never recovered from. I would rather not shackle this group of actors to directionless, lackluster films while their careers are thriving. And leaving it at three, they could perhaps always revisit the Kelvin universe later on, The Motion Picture-style, after the cast is a little older.

All that being said, I hope that the Kelvinverse continues in the comics and in novels. I also would love it if CBS and Paramount worked out their issues and put Discovery in the Kelvinverse where it fits much better than the Prime universe. I don't think they would have to change much to do that right now. Absent that, say have a Captain Sulu show, set in the Kelvinverse, on All Access.
Do you mean Discovery will literally spore-jump into the Kelvin Timeline, or there will be a reveal that the show was in the Kelvin timeline the whole time? Because I don't think the latter is possible at all. The NCC-1701 is clearly stated to be brand new in 2258 (was even shown to be in construction in 2255), while Discovery already has the NCC-1701 having a long service history. Not to mention the mess jamming Amanda in Discovery and dying in Kelvinverse together and all the other contradictions--Discovery is definitely not Kelvin. The only contradictions with Prime in Discovery are cosmetic, style-based issues (sets, design, etc. obviously not 1960s style), but no actual story or dialogue contradictions.
Except for the tiny, little complication that Leonard Nimoy died in February 2015. He was also in very poor health for the year or so leading up to that and he wasn't on speaking terms with William Shatner at all for the last five years of his life. A Shatner-Nimoy Reunion for the 50th Anniversary wouldn't have happened regardless of whatever was happening on Bad Robot's end.
This always saddens me a lot. I remember seeing them both in person in Sacramento at the 2006 40th anniversary convention, and they sure seemed like good pals. They had a lot of interactions you read about online hugging, chatting, and Nimoy called Shatner his brother. Something really bad must have happened, and Shatner professes ignorance as to what this was. Although Shatner speculates it might be a fight over Nimoy footage used without permission in a documentary, Bob Orci outright says this isn't the case, and that there was another reason, here: https://trekmovie.com/2016/03/25/review-leonard-my-fifty-year-friendship-with-a-remarkable-man/ (just search the page for 'boborci' and you will find his comment).
 
Wouldn’t for me. I didn’t even like Nimoy coming back, especially a second time. nuTrek should have stood on its own from the start.
The first film was ok, and I'm glad Nimoy agreed to come back. The second one was unnecessary and could be edited out with little consequence.
 
I can't say I'm surprised about this at all. Into Darkness didn't grow the audience, Beyond underperformed at the box office, the 4th film was delayed, and then news came out about the studio asking Pine to take a salary cut. The writing was on the wall.

Paramount is struggling for a hit and they don't have much in their catalog, so I'm sure they'll try again with another Star Trek film eventually.
 
No need for panic! at the disco just yet. After all it took 20-something years for the Mission: Impossible film series, which is the franchise most equatable to the Kelvin Treks, to do six movies.

Not to mention all those stalled Trek projects before TMP, after TMP, before Trek '09 and Orci's Kelvin Trek 3.

These things happen in Hollywood.
 
Oh, man. The Doomweenie crowd are going to be insufferable about this. Well, hooray, I guess? They get what they want, a franchise on stasis.

What do Kelvin fans need with more movies when the Kelvin "feel" is plastered all over Discovery and probably the other shows? The damage is done.
 
Oh, man. The Doomweenie crowd are going to be insufferable about this. Well, hooray, I guess? They get what they want, a franchise on stasis.

What do Kelvin fans need with more movies when the Kelvin "feel" is plastered all over Discovery and probably the other shows? The damage is done.
Come on, you guys both know better than that.

Talk about the movies/shows, talk about the people making them/not making them, but don't go taking swipes at other groups of fans just because they like different things than you do.
 
The movies were great, but they performed the function they were intended to fulfill: They got Star Trek back on the small screen. There's no need for more, and the idea that now the adventures of the nuEnterprise-A are only going to be in our imaginations is a good way to end the Abramsverse.
 
Mixed feelings on this.

Sad for the people who really loved these Kelvin movies.

Personally I liked the first, but then it all went down hill. Into Darkness was just a very bad rehash and Beyond was so not Star Trek, with these silly motor chases and Beastie Boys music, I hated it.

I kinda liked the premise for the 4th one, but I don't think this movie will ever be made.

So now we have to wait again... I think there will be a new Star Trek movie within the next 5 years, but it will be different.

Exciting times! And, this time we'll have more and more Star Trek on TV, the place where Trek really belongs...
 
Could them just clearing the deck for the movie they REALLY want to make and that is the Tarantino Trek. Then they can proceed with a TNG reboot.


Jason
 
So while the TV franchise is flying high the movies have come crashing down to Earth.

A pity, I would have liked another one, maybe with Shatner back one more time.
That's probably the only thing that would have interested me in another movie.

Whilst I do feel sympathy for those that enjoyed them, I really didn't and am somewhat relieved there won't be more I still end up going to see and buying on Bluray.
 
Disappointing, but not unexpected. Beyond was wonderful, but the marketing was absolutely terrible - trying to appeal so hard to an audience not interested in Trek while alienating Trek fans. I imagine between the success of STD and CBS going in hard and the Tarantino stuff generating buzz, they didn't see it a worthwhile investment. Not even mentioning the less than stellar box office, even the new Star Wars movie struggled due to backlash and earned a similar amount.

i'd be happy to see Trek movies go back to relatively low budget rather than competing with Disney tentpoles, couldn't see a Tarantino movie being a 200m movie.
 
Do you mean Discovery will literally spore-jump into the Kelvin Timeline, or there will be a reveal that the show was in the Kelvin timeline the whole time? Because I don't think the latter is possible at all. The NCC-1701 is clearly stated to be brand new in 2258 (was even shown to be in construction in 2255), while Discovery already has the NCC-1701 having a long service history. Not to mention the mess jamming Amanda in Discovery and dying in Kelvinverse together and all the other contradictions--Discovery is definitely not Kelvin. The only contradictions with Prime in Discovery are cosmetic, style-based issues (sets, design, etc. obviously not 1960s style), but no actual story or dialogue contradictions.

This always saddens me a lot. I remember seeing them both in person in Sacramento at the 2006 40th anniversary convention, and they sure seemed like good pals. They had a lot of interactions you read about online hugging, chatting, and Nimoy called Shatner his brother. Something really bad must have happened, and Shatner professes ignorance as to what this was. Although Shatner speculates it might be a fight over Nimoy footage used without permission in a documentary, Bob Orci outright says this isn't the case, and that there was another reason, here: https://trekmovie.com/2016/03/25/review-leonard-my-fifty-year-friendship-with-a-remarkable-man/ (just search the page for 'boborci' and you will find his comment).

I was thinking more along the lines of aesthetic and tonal similarities between Discovery and the Abrams-Lin films. Discovery just 'fits' better with that style. Though you raise an interesting question. Can things be fudged to have Discovery fit within the existing continuity of the Abrams era films? I took the new 2258 Enterprise to just be the new version of that Enterprise, and not the first Federation ship named Enterprise. With that interpretation, it can just be that the Enterprise that shows up at the end of Discovery Season 1 is the version that will be decommissioned or destroyed, making way for the 2258 Enterprise, perhaps named in honor of the fallen starship?

In the Discovery timeline we haven't got to 2258 yet so they can still write in the destruction of Vulcan and Amanda's death. (As I've mentioned in past threads, Amanda's presence muddies the whole Georgiou as human mother/mentor to Burnham anyway. I mean, Amanda seems like a pretty attentive, supportive, and understanding mother so I don't get why Burnham needed another mother figure for the show; a career mentor fine, but the relationship between Georgiou and Burnham is more than just that, it's maternal in many ways). I've seen pictures of the Into Darkness Klingons beside the Discovery Klingons and it looks like the Darkness Klingons are a bridge between the older Prime Klingon depictions and Discovery's depictions. Also, the D4-class ship in Darkness does that as well when it comes to Klingon ships.

If the Picard show deals with the aftermath of the destruction of Romulus, I can see a greater merging of the Prime and Kelvin timelines. With Alex Kurtzman at the helm, and if he's able to do it, I don't see why he wouldn't want to build on what he's already helped create with the Kelvin films.

The idea of Discovery spore jumping into the Kelvinverse is something I hadn't thought before, and I think would be cool.

When it comes to Discovery's contradictions with Prime Trek, the start of the conflict with the Klingons as stated by Spock in Star Trek 6 doesn't quite work with Discovery. Also, the idea that a quadrant-spanning war with the Klingons is never mentioned in TOS or other Treks is also strange-not a canon violation per se, but just seems like something they would have mentioned. Memory Alpha had to alter their entries, because for a long time, the 'first' Klingon War took place during "Errand of Mercy" and the second was on DS9, but now they've had to add this war. I'm sure there are other small things, but for the most part I haven't seen where Discovery has overturned canon, though it has complicated it. I don't have a problem with the Klingon War, though I would've put it about 20 years earlier (like Axanar did) to get it away from potentially complicating anything with the TOS characters. I'm more 'bothered' (too strong a word) by the line that the Klingons have been off the scene-mostly-for 100 years. That didn't feel right to me, it contradicts what Spock said (which would've had the start of the Klingon-Federation conflict as starting around the 2220s), and was an unnecessary line anyway. It didn't serve to do much for Discovery's story to have the Klingons be off the scene. (It's not a contradiction at all, but I do wish Discovery would mention the Sheliak. It would be a nice nod to TNG IMO, and predated the Klingon War by a year).
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top