Leftover pieces of Dirk Bennadict.
Poor guy. He got turned into a King Cobra snake in "Sssssss" (1973), too.
Leftover pieces of Dirk Bennadict.
Not at all. I just think some of the changes were too drastic. That's all.
And if JJ changed nothing, he be castigated as cowardly and unoriginal.
In the end, after the first couple of weekends of release, the film's primary audience in theaters will be Trekkers and fans more than newcomers and the uninitiated.
Not true. Not at all.
Star Trek fans have only ever made up about a steady ten percent of any ST movie's audience. Admittedly, that figure can be obscured by the fans who return for multiple viewings, but DVD has lessened the need for multiple viewings.
Collectors of tie-in literature only make up about one percent of the audience. Diehard completist collectors are a percentage of that one percent.
The vast bulk of the fanbase abandoned Nemesis before it even opened (thus, why it got it's butt kicked opening weekend by "Maid in Manhattan"). The fact that it was a lousy movie only made things worse, by reinforcing the fan's original decision to not turn out opening day. If it was a good movie, it would've recovered and made that $45 million within a couple of weeks instead of having to stay out in theatres for close to a year.
It all comes down to "what do you change?"Not at all. I just think some of the changes were too drastic. That's all.
And if JJ changed nothing, he be castigated as cowardly and unoriginal.
No significant percentage of the Trek fanbase did not see "Nemesis" in the theaters, and most saw it opening weekend. The box office gross demonstrates that.
It's simply that no one other than the hard core bothered with it - not because of bad things said by fans, but because most people were just about five years past caring about anything "Star Trek" when the film opened.
Some folks have an exaggerated notion of how extensive the hard core fanbase is, and so have imagined that many didn't see the movie. That's mistaken.
I don't know... I got the impression that a huge number of people went to see the movie on opening weekend, then left the theatres angry and reported to all their friends that it sucked so nobody else went to see it. I remember that I went to see it the day after opening and the theatre was packed.No significant percentage of the Trek fanbase did not see "Nemesis" in the theaters, and most saw it opening weekend. The box office gross demonstrates that.
It's simply that no one other than the hard core bothered with it - not because of bad things said by fans, but because most people were just about five years past caring about anything "Star Trek" when the film opened.
Some folks have an exaggerated notion of how extensive the hard core fanbase is, and so have imagined that many didn't see the movie. That's mistaken.
What usually happens is that everyone goes to see the movie once and then goes and tells their friends the movie is awesome...
it's "keeping the formulaic storytelling style that's been so overused in Trek-dom."
How do we know Nero is like that?I was really, REALLY, hoping that there wouldn't be a "mustache-twirling villain" in this film. But there is.
I got the impression that a huge number of people went to see the movie on opening weekend, then left the theatres angry and reported to all their friends that it sucked so nobody else went to see it.
Polaris, he's saying that nobody did. Do you work for Paramount, by the way?
I got the impression that a huge number of people went to see the movie on opening weekend, then left the theatres angry and reported to all their friends that it sucked so nobody else went to see it.
"Nemesis" was the only ST movie not to win its first US weekend of opening. It was sorely beaten by "Maid in Manhattan", a J-Lo movie.
Polaris, he's saying that nobody did. Do you work for Paramount, by the way?
http://memory-alpha.org/en/wiki/Dennis_Russell_Bailey
The reason that Nemesis failed is because the story sucked.
People have been thrown out of Star Trek offices for better sories[sic].
that's a yes...
As far as I know, twelve (all the Trekkies that I personally know).What usually happens is that everyone goes to see the movie once and then goes and tells their friends the movie is awesome...
Oh come on - how many Trekkies ever went to see a Trek movie, told all of their friends and family that it was "awesome," and were met with anything but modest approval or long-suffering and understanding shrugs?
Is that the "General" experience? Don't know how to tell you this, but I've never been able to tell my parents (or anyone else who would possibly have a reason to address me as "dear") about a Star Trek movie because, usually, they've either seen it or bought the bootleg. With anyone else it's "I'll go see it... if it's good," and then--in the case of Nemesis and Insurrection--I wind up grimacing and saying "Eh... never mind."Generally followed, upon insistence, with remarks like "yes, dear, okay. I'll go see it with you next weekend if you help with the errands so that we have time to do that and have dinner with my parents on Friday."![]()
I got the impression that a huge number of people went to see the movie on opening weekend, then left the theatres angry and reported to all their friends that it sucked so nobody else went to see it.
"Nemesis" was the only ST movie not to win its first US weekend of opening. It was sorely beaten by "Maid in Manhattan", a J-Lo movie.
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