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CBS/Paramount sues to stop Axanar 2 - Electric Boogaloo-Fanboys gone WILD-too many hyphens

Do you enjoy pie?

  • Yes, sweet, please

    Votes: 79 40.9%
  • Yes, savory, please

    Votes: 42 21.8%
  • Yes, any kind

    Votes: 80 41.5%
  • No, I'm a heathen

    Votes: 37 19.2%

  • Total voters
    193

Axanar's 'Heroes' Vignette

This may be the only Axanar you ever see, coming in late June: the "Heroes" 15-min. vignette, shot on the New Voyages sets in 2015. This clip, exclusive to AxaMonitor, was posted by director Robert Meyer Burnett.
I hope they fix the sound editing before releasing it. Everyone sounds like they had a different quality microphone.
 
Too little variety in camera angles (it's like they put different lenses on and didn't move the camera). They STILL couldn't get the eyelines right: e.g. Garth looks camera right to Kirk and Kirk looks camera right in response. So much for "pro" anything. This stuff is NOT hard, people!
 
This stuff is NOT hard, people!

It is when you are NOT a professional. People think this stuff is simple.......it ain't as easy as it looks sitting at home. Hell I am surprised more Starbucks cups don't make it into final cuts. That's why you have PAs and 2nd ADs and wardrobe taking continuity pics every damn time you come and go off the set. But yeah eyelines should be covered in the 101 class.......You can lead Alec to water but you can't make him drink.
 
It is when you are NOT a professional. People think this stuff is simple.......it ain't as easy as it looks sitting at home. Hell I am surprised more Starbucks cups don't make it into final cuts. That's why you have PAs and 2nd ADs and wardrobe taking continuity pics every damn time you come and go off the set. But yeah eyelines should be covered in the 101 class.......You can lead Alec to water but you can't make him drink.
It does happen in professional productions, and if they spot an incorrect eyeline they often flip the shot to keep it consistent. There's even a shot in ST09 where Nero's scarred ear jumps to the other side of his head because the screen direction was more important.
 
Watching Spock's arms in the clip is interesting too. He goes through three different poses during the beam in.
 
All I could think after watching this was "Kirk introduced Spock to Garth? Garth's met Spock! Garth fucking impersonated Spock! Did it not occur to anyone to mention this at the table read?"
To be fair, at the very end of "Whom Gods Destroy" after Garth has received treatment he doesn't recognize Kirk. So he probably doesn't have any memory of the stuff he did during his illness, and Kirk has obviously chosen to pretend the whole thing didn't happen.
 
To be fair, at the very end of "Whom Gods Destroy" after Garth has received treatment he doesn't recognize Kirk. So he probably doesn't have any memory of the stuff he did during his illness, and Kirk has obviously chosen to pretend the whole thing didn't happen.

Spock reintroduces himself during that final scene, however.
 
Confirmed. I was going to say Capt G. didn't remember due to the treatment (still a possibility), but he was introduced to all three:

[Treatment room]
(The inmates are getting their jabs.)
CORY: Will intramuscular injection be satisfactory?
MCCOY: Intravenous is indicated unless circumstances make it impossible.
CORY: How long before it takes effect, Doctor McCoy?
MCCOY: Reversal of arterial and brain damage should begin almost immediately.
(Garth is having a treatment in the chair.)
KIRK: Captain Garth, I'm James Kirk.
SPOCK: I am Mister Spock, science officer on a Starship.
KIRK: The starship Enterprise.
GARTH: Starship. Starship.
KIRK: Yes, sir, the Enterprise. I'm the captain. (Kirk and Garth shake hands) Can I help?
GARTH: No, Captain. The medicine seems to be taking effect. I can manage. It's very encouraging. Should I know you, sir?
KIRK: No, Captain. No.​
 
Spock reintroduces himself during that final scene, however.
Darn it, you're right. Well, unless a story point of the vignette is that Garth can no longer form short-term memories then Mr. "Keeper of the Faith" and "Lord of All Real Star Trek Fans" has made one heck of an error.
 
It is when you are NOT a professional. People think this stuff is simple.......it ain't as easy as it looks sitting at home. Hell I am surprised more Starbucks cups don't make it into final cuts. That's why you have PAs and 2nd ADs and wardrobe taking continuity pics every damn time you come and go off the set. But yeah eyelines should be covered in the 101 class.......You can lead Alec to water but you can't make him drink.
Who directed that? RMB? If so, he should know better.
 
Your posts seems to assume I'm financially obligated for someone else's playtime.
I'm not assuming that at all. I'm saying that if you actively curtail projects by externally imposing unnecessary restrictions, then you expect to reap the benefits of people who had to struggle on in spite of your active opposition, that doesn't exactly seem fair. Not that anyone here has any authority to impose those restrictions to begin with. Only CBS/Paramount does.
The crowdfunding model is not the same thing as people volunteering time and effort. People volunteering time, energy and materials to make something doesn't necessarily profit the project runners and actually gets the film made (in theory). Crowdfunding opens a spigot with no actual accountability for how the money is spent. I've seen this happen with fan productions even before Axanar. The latter is simply more easily misused and problematic than the former.
I appreciate that the system has its potential for abuse, but I don't think the solution is to assume abuse and prevent willing participants from supporting the projects they like. I'm happy to talk as much as you want about methods and practices to mitigate risk to patrons and help the producers not to bite off more than they can chew, though.
Actually, no. If it ends up free on YouTube and its good I'll consider that a nice surprise, but I have no reason to expect it to be there unless the people making it go out of their way to announce "It's gonna be on YouTube!"
This doesn't make sense. If the film was never funded, there are no special patrons to exclusively release it to.
What I do expect is for grown people who want to play dress-up in front of a camera to finance it themselves. Again, we're talking about a hobby. If they want to make it a profession - i.e. "get paid" - then they should go out and look for jobs that will pay them for whatever work they applied to the fan film.
If they "get paid", it's a violation of the Guidelines, which is beyond the scope of my original comments. I've never supported for-profit/commercial fan production without a license.
"But CBS and Paramount won't pay me to make Star Trek films." News flash: they don't have to, and neither does anybody else.
Strawman. I was responding to comments that crowdfunding should be restricted to levels lower that those permitted by CBS. It has nothing to do with requiring people to fund a project, and everything to do with requiring them NOT to fund a project.
If it is a hobby then yes. It would be very much like someone going hunting or fishing and inviting friends over to dine on the catch. How about I liked to fish, but I needed to start a GoFundMe to a boat and fuel, tackle and fishing gear? I'll need food for my trip, so add that. I forgot I need a NEW pickup truck and a trailer to tow the boat around............Oh and when my fishing trip is over I get to keep everything.......no matter if I catch any fish..........
Seems to me your beef is with GoFundMe, not fan films. I'm not sure why fan film makers need to personally solve crowdfunding, though.
And with YouTube views he will get ad revenue. So after my fishing trip, I'm going to charge you if you want to eat the fish I catch.
Since the coming of first Adpocalypse, most YouTubers are now funded almost entirely by Patreon. These days, you get less money from ads, and it's much harder to get monetized in the first place. Nobody's going to make any money directly from adds on a fan film.
Do we get patches?
I'd be fine with the elimination of perks in general from crowdfunding. In most cases, they only serve as a resource drain for legitimate projects anyway. Only situation where perks make sense for me is if the perk is also the thing that's being crowdfunded. (For example, if you're crowdfunding uniforms for a film, and the perk is one of the completed uniforms.)
Your posts seems to assume I'm financially obligated for someone else's playtime.
Not at all. I'm just saying that someone who forces everyone else NOT to donate to a fan film but has no problem watching that fan film, completed in spite of their efforts, is kind of a prick.
The crowdfunding model is not the same thing as people volunteering time and effort. People volunteering time, energy and materials to make something doesn't necessarily profit the project runners and actually gets the film made (in theory). Crowdfunding opens a spigot with no actual accountability for how the money is spent. I've seen this happen with fan productions even before Axanar. The latter is simply more easily misused and problematic than the former.
This seems to be about acting in bad faith. If there were no potential for abuse, would you still object to crowdfunding? 'Cause I'm more than happy to talk about how the community can organize to mitigate abusive crowdfunding...
 
I read the blogs about Interlude and its budget ; I'm confused a bit about the tunics.
So Alec insists on using his tailor to make the costumes , which increases the cost of Interlude...Lane assures us he can't give the costumes to Axanar, but what would stop him from 'selling' them at cost to Alec and then donating the money privately to Axanar ?
I was under the impression that he was saving Alec money by allowing him to place a bulk order that reduces the price per uniform, then reimbursing him for his share of the order. If so, he's not directly supporting Axanar financially, but he is allowing them to obtain costumes at a lower cost. Then again, I tend to think of Lane as more of a Kool-Aid drinker than an active participant in AP's misdeeds, so make of that what you will.
 
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