I was gonna say the same thing.Not sure what the arrangement is where you are, but Paramount+ is by subscription in the US. (i.e., not free.)
I was gonna say the same thing.Not sure what the arrangement is where you are, but Paramount+ is by subscription in the US. (i.e., not free.)
Not with that attitude.
Whilst you’re engaging in your usual fantasy tinged bloviating, could you actually answer the question I asked?
How do you figure that a Lower Decks movie would cost $3M to make?
Ugh...
I thought that's how you worked it out.
Making a LDS movie would not be a matter of just multiplying the cost of an episode x6.
As usual, you display such naiveté in understanding how any of this works.
For a start, the animation would have to be much higher in terms of definition to hold up on a cinema screen. For an example, see the difference between the average episode of The Simpsons and The Simpsons Movie.
In 2011 the average episode of The Simpsons cost 5M to make. The Simpsons Movie cost 75M. It is most certainly not just a case of taking that original 5M and multiplying it by 6.
And that's just the start. The Simpsons Movie had the financial clout behind it to cast Tom Hanks in a guest role and an LDS movie would have to do the same. Jack Quaid and Tawny Newsome are fine actors but they aren't a big enough draw for a cinema movie.
Not to mention the fact that an LDS movie would be a niche interest for ST fans only. There's no way I can imagine one of the uninitiated general public even thinking about watching it.
Anyway, as you were.
This.P+ is the perfect place for smaller scale Star Trek movies. It releases the producers from the pressure of the box office and ticket sales and allows them in all honesty to tell what could be far more interesting stories.
Eveything you've said is nonsense.
Trek works best on TV. The experience of the TNG and Kelvinverse movies proves that.
Eveything you've said is nonsense.
Maybe you just don't understand my post.Par for the course.
Because they're not trying iconography anymore. They are trying to recapture the past.And yet, they keep going to the TWOK well and to an extent, the TUC well. More than even the BoBW well or any number of other episodes.
Star Trek movies tend to create iconic stuff. They just haven’t done so in a very long time.
How many "mid-budgeted" science fiction action movies do you see getting wide theatrical releases now?
What do you consider "mid-budget?" 100 million dollars or less?
It’s a fact that mid budget movies are between $4M and $75M. The latter if what it cost to make INS.
I’m not quite sure why you think I have no awareness of that.
No.Answer the first part.
I knew you wouldn't. The answer demolishes the premise underlying your proposals.
No. I’m just tired of 21 Questions. It rarely, if ever, is to my benefit.
Gareth Edwards' upcoming sci-fi film The Creator apparently has a budget of $85 million and the visuals look far better than the recent crop of $300 million superhero movies. So I think that would be a good budget to aim for with a Star Trek movie.
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