You might want to reconsider that "absolutely won't" phrase; anyone who believes that doesn't understand what a good model (real or CGI), good lighting and good cinematography can do. But to offer proof that it can work, Vektor's update of the iconic 1701:Some of you who think the 60s version could work on the big screen today really need to find a clue. It absolutely won't work.
I think the original enterprise is iconic - and you know what's it's use here would have signalled?
same old shit kids, like your daddy watched.
At three seasons, Star Trek was the only hit out of all the new shows of 1966.
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Jim is surprised by your remark.
As are these guys.
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Ask some people on the street and I bet the majority will tell you that it is the Enterprise.
Show the people on the street a frisbiee with two paper-towel tubes tied to it and they'll call it the Enterprise.
I don't care what the people on the street think.
Because the "people on the street" wouldn't be caught dead going to see a Star Trek movie. Appealing to them is a wasted effort.
Would it have been that bad to simply just use this design (The Cage version, of course) for this movie? Why make any drastic changes to it at all? Why not give fans the awe and wonder of seeing this timeless and classic ship on a 50-foot tall screen in all of its movie-level budget glory?
The non-fans will obviously notice the difference between TOS Enterprise and Abram's Enterprise. Give them a choice between which one looks more futuristic and most will point to the re-imagined one. This new Enterprise will join the ranks of the new sleek cars, airplanes, and gadgets that people want today.
This movie is supposed to be something akin to doing a period piece, right? Would you make a movie about the Battle of Britain using modern aircraft instead of period aircraft?
So? As far as things have progressed for the franchise, this is a part of its "history", so what if it's just a show? It's supposed to be taken seriously as a drama, right? Are you so close-minded that you won't consider an analogy that disagrees with your viewpoint?Flawed analogy: this is fiction about events that haven't happened yet, and not a historical piece.
So? As far as things have progressed for the franchise, this is a part of its "history", so what if it's just a show? It's supposed to be taken seriously as a drama, right? Are you so close-minded that you won't consider an analogy that disagrees with your viewpoint?Flawed analogy: this is fiction about events that haven't happened yet, and not a historical piece.
You might want to reconsider that "absolutely won't" phrase; anyone who believes that doesn't understand what a good model (real or CGI), good lighting and good cinematography can do. But to offer proof that it can work, Vektor's update of the iconic 1701:Some of you who think the 60s version could work on the big screen today really need to find a clue. It absolutely won't work.
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"To Far Horizons"
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You can't honestly claim this "absolutely won't work" on the big screen.
I think the original enterprise is iconic - and you know what's it's use here would have signalled?
same old shit kids, like your daddy watched.
As many people here who do like the new ship have claimed that, to the non-fans, it 'looks just like the iconic Enterprise,' then even the new ship signals that same message. That's why I fail to comprehend any defense of it - its differences are unrecognizable to non-fans, the target audience, so why even do it? Just polish up the original enough, as we see can be done quite well by someone with talent, skill and imagination, and then you satisfy a greater cross-section of your potential audience. Hard-core fans may be in the minority, but their money is every bit as good as that of non-fans - maybe better, because if people know enough about Star Trek to not like it, "reimagining" it isn't going to change their minds and drag them into the theaters. There's a gaping disconnect in Paramount's logic there.
Not necessarily. Some on here think Transformers is a bad movie and look where that went.If we get a bad story, the movie will flop, period.
Not necessarily. Some on here think Transformers is a bad movie and look where that went.If we get a bad story, the movie will flop, period.
Not necessarily. Some on here think Transformers is a bad movie and look where that went.If we get a bad story, the movie will flop, period.
Why not? I'm working with the confines of the show and this is the show's "history".No, as analogies are supposed to show other viewpoints. I'm saying, you can't really categorize something like a period piece of the past to compare to a period piece of the future, especially an imagined, morphable, fantasy-based one.
Remastered actually could have gone further in detailing the ship, but everything else they did only expanded on what was already there, yet remained entirely consistent with the rest of the franchise.Heck, Trek already has an example like this: how many ships have been reimagined in the Remastered version?
Continuity issues and ripping off a 24th century ship design damaged its credibility and unimaginative storytelling doomed it to failure. Yet it was still less of a brain fart that Abrams totally rebooting the entire franchise like he is with this movie.Or Enterprise?
I just wish BSG gives us a good ending.
Ah well, January's not far off. We'll know for certain who the fifth is.I just wish BSG gives us a good ending.
Don't hold your breath. According to EJO, it's gonna be a downer. I really hope he's kidding.
Ah well, January's not far off. We'll know for certain who the fifth is.I just wish BSG gives us a good ending.
Don't hold your breath. According to EJO, it's gonna be a downer. I really hope he's kidding.![]()
Why not? I'm working with the confines of the show and this is the show's "history".No, as analogies are supposed to show other viewpoints. I'm saying, you can't really categorize something like a period piece of the past to compare to a period piece of the future, especially an imagined, morphable, fantasy-based one.
And yet Friendship One in Voyager looked a heckuva lot more functional than the TOS Enterprise. So did the Phoenix, despite its near steam-punk appearance.Continuity issues and ripping off a 24th century ship design damaged its credibility and unimaginative storytelling doomed it to failure. Yet it was still less of a brain fart that Abrams totally rebooting the entire franchise like he is with this movie.Or Enterprise?
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