Maybe "The Cage" and "WNMHGB" is the equivalent to the early drafts of Star Wars with Annikin Starkiller. I wonder if you could pick one episode from each TOS season, whether it's the best or just really encapsulates what Trek is about, to be the three OT films. Or smoosh two together into feature length. Episode IV: The Man Trap on the Edge of Forever.Star Trek starting on the big screen probably also wouldn't have gotten or developed a big audience (assuming the first plot was "The Cage" or "Where No Man Has Gone Before", "The Return of the Archons", "Errand of Mercy" if they were lucky enough to choose to use the Klingons) but there would likewise be some fans arguing Spock was a great character, the setting was interesting and there was a lot of unappreciated potential.
Maybe "The Cage" and "WNMHGB" is the equivalent to the early drafts of Star Wars with Annikin Starkiller. I wonder if you could pick one episode from each TOS season, whether it's the best or just really encapsulates what Trek is about, to be the three OT films. Or smoosh two together into feature length. Episode IV: The Man Trap on the Edge of Forever.
I think a good first Star Trek movie would, as Lord Garth said, be about the crew getting together. But I'd say it should be the crew getting together plus Balance of Terror. They should fight the Romulans, and discover that the Vulcans and Romulans are secretly the same species. The movie could explore racism. Also, the episode already has a wedding in it; that can become a big part of the plot and happen near the end.
DARTH SAREK: No, I am your father...Spock's real father is the Romulan Commander they had been fighting for a movie and a half. I mean, he uncannily looks like his dad.
Note that Star Wars went to television a year after the end of the original trilogy. They made two live-action films set on the planet Endor and I gotta state, for TV movies they were outstanding. I typically feel that aside from Star Trek, The X-Files and The Outer-Limits, TV shows simply do not have the quality of films.
With their limited budget, time constraints and visual affects, they cannot live up to the quality of films. However television films and miniseries can pull off a better image.
But even with the time constraints, Lucas's genius pulled off a much better product than one would expect for Sci-Fi television films. Note that these spin-off films are equally fantasy as they are Sci-Fi:
I think a good first Star Trek movie would, as Lord Garth said, be about the crew getting together. But I'd say it should be the crew getting together plus Balance of Terror. They should fight the Romulans, and discover that the Vulcans and Romulans are secretly the same species. The movie could explore racism. Also, the episode already has a wedding in it; that can become a big part of the plot and happen near the end.
Spock's real father is the Romulan Commander they had been fighting for a movie and a half. I mean, he uncannily looks like his dad.
TV shows often try to match that "epic" feel of film - and for (any) various reason(s) don't match up to it, even if they give each episode several zillion dollars. Putting the TV episodes that look nice onto a big screen doesn't often fix that issue either.
IMHO, Star Wars has always been more fantasy-themed. Both are part of the same overall genre, overlap is inevitable.
And both of those still give the children in the audience more respect and dignity than "The Phantom Menace" ever could. Never understood how fart jokes are considered somehow more hilarious than Chris Rock and Robin Williams combined... it's a shame they didn't do that with the Taun-Tauns to taunt-taunt the audience with via its toot-toot...the audience two decades earlier would have balked...
The music sounds generic, or these movies had the score created that would become generic use for lots of other shows. I'd swear an action riff was even used in Red Dwarf (with Ace Rimmer in it...)
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