If it weren't for all that Iron Man money, I'd say we might be looking at Paramount's answer to "Heaven's Gate".
As it is, I suspect it'll be met at the box office with a collective yawn and the franchise will finally revert back to where it should've stayed the whole time, on the television side of the shop.
allowing massive changes to go uncorrected.
Dimming the lights isn't going to change the fact of a fracked up bridge design.
With all due respect, because I've been paying close attention. The changes in the timeline are responsible for a plethora of discrepancies with TOS. A different looking ship, inside and out... not forgetting where it was built and when it was launched. Character background changes, to account for younger actors filling positions it took the originals longer to acheive. The chances of this film suddenly fitting neatly back into established history before the end titles are zero I'd say.How do you know that Kirk's past is to remain uncorrected?
I'm actually not one of those fans who cares too much whether this film is an exact replica of original Star Trek or not. The NX-01 bridge had more in common with The Cage bridge than what I've seen so far. I fully understand the need to keep one step ahead of modern technology. A story that creates an alternate reality is insidious, and a way to cheat doing your homework about TOS. Without a history altering villain, this could've been traditional and in keeping with established facts, in every aspect but production values. Something respectful like Bryan Singer's Superman Returns, that flatly refuses to explain different looking actors and a modern setting. It asked you to make believe that was the same Donner-universe, without any convoluted reasoning.Maybe at the end the ship's interior won't be as bright, maybe Kirk realizes he now remembers a different background that he thought he knew? Who knows!
I don't think this film will fit neatly back into established history, but NOR do I think the changes to the look of the ship and TOS history will be explained "in-film".With all due respect, because I've been paying close attention. The changes in the timeline are responsible for a plethora of discrepancies with TOS. A different looking ship, inside and out... not forgetting where it was built and when it was launched. Character background changes, to account for younger actors filling positions it took the originals longer to acheive. The chances of this film suddenly fitting neatly back into established history before the end titles are zero I'd say.How do you know that Kirk's past is to remain uncorrected?
I'm actually not one of those fans who cares too much whether this film is an exact replica of original Star Trek or not. The NX-01 bridge had more in common with The Cage bridge than what I've seen so far. I fully understand the need to keep one step ahead of modern technology. A story that creates an alternate reality is insidious, and a way to cheat doing your homework about TOS. Without a history altering villain, this could've been traditional and in keeping with established facts, in every aspect but production values. Something respectful like Bryan Singer's Superman Returns, that flatly refuses to explain different looking actors and a modern setting. It asked you to make believe that was the same Donner-universe, without any convoluted reasoning.Maybe at the end the ship's interior won't be as bright, maybe Kirk realizes he now remembers a different background that he thought he knew? Who knows!
Something respectful like Bryan Singer's Superman Returns, that flatly refuses to explain different looking actors and a modern setting. It asked you to make believe that was the same Donner-universe, without any convoluted reasoning.
Let's consider Robert Wise and the original 'reinvention’ of Star Trek. He was quite the director prior to his over budget blunder. He also blew the opportunity. All the marketing and hype could not save this feature. Let’s then consider the much more frugal next feature. As we know, it directed Nick Meyer, who did not know much about Trek but did quite well by all standards and saved the ‘Trek’ universe, who also directed the final ‘credible’ Trek movie. So – will J.J. doom it or save it? Let’s say – we’ve seen this before. Maybe giving it to a relatively unknown, who had something to prove yields better results. But – of course, there are always possibilities.
I'm actually not one of those fans who cares too much whether this film is an exact replica of original Star Trek or not. The NX-01 bridge had more in common with The Cage bridge than what I've seen so far. I fully understand the need to keep one step ahead of modern technology. A story that creates an alternate reality is insidious, and a way to cheat doing your homework about TOS. Without a history altering villain, this could've been traditional and in keeping with established facts, in every aspect but production values. Something respectful like Bryan Singer's Superman Returns, that flatly refuses to explain different looking actors and a modern setting. It asked you to make believe that was the same Donner-universe, without any convoluted reasoning.
He's gonna be turned into a lamp shade, I tell you. You heard Hitler.I'm actually not one of those fans who cares too much whether this film is an exact replica of original Star Trek or not. The NX-01 bridge had more in common with The Cage bridge than what I've seen so far. I fully understand the need to keep one step ahead of modern technology. A story that creates an alternate reality is insidious, and a way to cheat doing your homework about TOS. Without a history altering villain, this could've been traditional and in keeping with established facts, in every aspect but production values. Something respectful like Bryan Singer's Superman Returns, that flatly refuses to explain different looking actors and a modern setting. It asked you to make believe that was the same Donner-universe, without any convoluted reasoning.
Well put. I've also said that doing this just to placate canon and still be able to mostly wipe the slate clean is a bit of a cheat. Now, I could've gone for a complete reboot if they'd have wanted to do it that way. Fair enough. Say it up front. Still, I would've preferred something more like what's said above. There were plenty of gaps in the TOS period that could've been filled. TOS was episodic, not a serial.
My fear is they've taken a middle position to try to please all, and that may end up with a story that pleases no one. JJ, I hope you know what you're doing.![]()
I'm actually not one of those fans who cares too much whether this film is an exact replica of original Star Trek or not. The NX-01 bridge had more in common with The Cage bridge than what I've seen so far. I fully understand the need to keep one step ahead of modern technology. A story that creates an alternate reality is insidious, and a way to cheat doing your homework about TOS. Without a history altering villain, this could've been traditional and in keeping with established facts, in every aspect but production values. Something respectful like Bryan Singer's Superman Returns, that flatly refuses to explain different looking actors and a modern setting. It asked you to make believe that was the same Donner-universe, without any convoluted reasoning.
I'm actually not one of those fans who cares too much whether this film is an exact replica of original Star Trek or not. The NX-01 bridge had more in common with The Cage bridge than what I've seen so far. I fully understand the need to keep one step ahead of modern technology. A story that creates an alternate reality is insidious, and a way to cheat doing your homework about TOS. Without a history altering villain, this could've been traditional and in keeping with established facts, in every aspect but production values. Something respectful like Bryan Singer's Superman Returns, that flatly refuses to explain different looking actors and a modern setting. It asked you to make believe that was the same Donner-universe, without any convoluted reasoning.
Except that Superman Returns didn't exactly do well in the theaters now did it.
If anything can be read from some of the replies to this thread I'd say many Star Trek fans are nothing but a bunch of whiny, sad, disrespectful ingrates. We are getting a movie that is not only getting mainstream press but actually becoming water cooler talk after nearly 15 years and all they can do is keep whining. For someone of J.J's caliber, he could have easily gotten away without making any Trek at all, and Trek would have been a lost in time franchise like.. gasp!.. Lost in Space or Man from U.N.C.L.E. We are getting something completely out of the blue, a true movie calling itself Star Trek. Yet you naysayers keep spewing vitriol.![]()
Yet you naysayers keep spewing vitriol.![]()
The intelligence of the naysayers can be clearly summed up by your post.If anything can be read from some of the replies to this thread I'd say many Star Trek fans are nothing but a bunch of whiny, sad, disrespectful ingrates. We are getting a movie that is not only getting mainstream press but actually becoming water cooler talk after nearly 15 years and all they can do is keep whining. For someone of J.J's caliber, he could have easily gotten away without making any Trek at all, and Trek would have been a lost in time franchise like.. gasp!.. Lost in Space or Man from U.N.C.L.E. We are getting something completely out of the blue, a true movie calling itself Star Trek. Yet you naysayers keep spewing vitriol.![]()
back at ya. See sig.
Wasn't the original Mission: Impossible TV series produced in the mid-1960s for American television? Weren't Abrams, Ocri, and Kurtzman involved in recent M:I filmmaking? Do you really need to roll your eyes at my analogy?I love it when people completely ignore the example in the post in favorHow many have become hooked on the original Mission: Impossible TV series because of their interest in the M:I movies? My guess would be, not many.
of the one that suits them better. Nice job.![]()
Of course, analogies aren't going to correspond 100%, but this one is about as close as I can get.
Having said all that, Abrams didn't doom Mission: Impossible (though I haven't watched the movie and I have the TV series on DVD), so I don't expect that he'll doom Star Trek either.
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Brutal Strudel's opinions on this detail or that may not coincide with your own, but I've seen him post in this forum quite knowledgeably and articulately on any number of occasions. I can assure you that there is nothing the matter with Mr. Strudel's intelligence.The intelligence of the naysayers can be clearly summed up by your post.If anything can be read from some of the replies to this thread I'd say many Star Trek fans are nothing but a bunch of whiny, sad, disrespectful ingrates. We are getting a movie that is not only getting mainstream press but actually becoming water cooler talk after nearly 15 years and all they can do is keep whining. For someone of J.J's caliber, he could have easily gotten away without making any Trek at all, and Trek would have been a lost in time franchise like.. gasp!.. Lost in Space or Man from U.N.C.L.E. We are getting something completely out of the blue, a true movie calling itself Star Trek. Yet you naysayers keep spewing vitriol.![]()
back at ya. See sig.
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