I'm really glad that none of the hate for Section 31 is spilling over to the actors, at least not here.
Two answers.
Apparently, it's produced by the movie division, it cost upwards of $80 million. It bears the marks of a proper movie.
Not according to one of the actors (Robert Kazinsky), who in an interview said Section 31 essentially cost the equivalent of two episodes of Strange New Worlds, which I think would be around $14 million, not $80 million (although it’s not clear whether Yeoh’s salary is included in this).80?!!?
TMP?Also, the development history is important in determining its nature.
- Intended as a tv series
- Went into pre-production as a tv series
-They hired a noted film director to make it a movieTMP?
Just talking about the points I quoted. Obviously SEC31 took a different path once it became a movie. TMP had it's own problems once it headed towards the screen.-They hired a noted film director to make it a movie
-Spent a fortune on it and expanded it, instead of treating it as TV material
-They didn't condense the Phase II stuff, if anything they expanded it to fit the format of a movie
-TMP tries to transcend its TV roots, where Section 31 is firmly rooted in Discovery's aesthetics and story formula.
-The people involved with TMP seemed to have seen making a movie as an opportunity to stretch and make something different and unique using the material, where Section 31 has the feel of trying to dust off a rejected script and the cast crew cashing a check for their work.
How can anyone be expected to create good material when they have a specific budget and a mandated running time? No Trek in history has had to deal with constrictions like this.he pretty much confirmed that this movie was shot on a two-episode Strange New Worlds budget and was only allowed to run so long, and not a second more.
As to the question... is in no way this a movie, ala the big screen movies.
It's what was always called a "TV movie" back in the day, and that's what it is.
How much of that $80 million was Michelle Yeoh's salary? (Not that she wouldn't take less. but her agent/agency...)Two answers.
Apparently, it's produced by the movie division, it cost upwards of $80 million. It bears the marks of a proper movie.
But TV movies, even expensive ones have been released to networks or streaming without being cinematically released and were not counted as cinema movies.
So to me, this is a TV movie.
I will be more dogmatic.I'm not going to tell people they're wrong for considering it a movie-movie, but personally I'll never see it that way.
None of this makes any difference, though. A movie is a movie is a movie.-They hired a noted film director to make it a movie
-Spent a fortune on it and expanded it, instead of treating it as TV material
-They didn't condense the Phase II stuff, if anything they expanded it to fit the format of a movie
-TMP tries to transcend its TV roots, where Section 31 is firmly rooted in Discovery's aesthetics and story formula.
-The people involved with TMP seemed to have seen making a movie as an opportunity to stretch and make something different and unique using the material, where Section 31 has the feel of trying to dust off a rejected script and the cast crew cashing a check for their work.
So the 1980s Ewok movies are Star Wars movies just like the trilogies and Rogue One?None of this makes any difference, though. A movie is a movie is a movie.
They are movies. What does your qualifier "just like" supposed to mean?So the 1980s Ewok movies are Star Wars movies just like the trilogies and Rogue One?
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