What is?That's just sad.
The effort? The effort to do what? Make a prequel set in the Prime universe? We already know exactly what happened to all those characters afterwards. How could you possibly create any suspense? What would be the next movies be about? A feature-length TOS episodes, where you know in advance that every main character survives, that none of them has a significant relationship outside of expendable guest stars, that they all go to their 5-year old mission - and exactly what kind of people they'll all turn out to be? Well, wouldn't that be exciting, and such a great opportunity to be creative and provide both great suspense and great character development in the future.Wow, I didn't know we were allowed to cuss in this forum!
But yeah...Abrams didn't need to do what he did. He could have put it within the "Prime" timeline and made it fun and original, but I just don't think he wanted to go to the effort.
Oh please, not THIS "argument." In every movie, the audience knows that the majority of main characters are going to survive, whether we've seen the character's future or not. It's usually a twist if the character dies. Going into the theatre, you know that Kirk, Spock, and McCoy aren't going to be killed off. So is there REALLY suspense from that? Did anyone REALLY think "Oh wow, one of these main iconic characters might be killed off in this film because their future is uncertain in this reality?" The answer is "no."We already know exactly what happened to all [the Prime universe] characters afterwards. How could you possibly create any suspense? What would be the next movies be about?
Yep, that's the thinking Paramount goes by. Whatever rakes in the dough - quality doesn't matter.Most people liked NuTrek than not, and in the end that's what counts.
We're talking about a franchise, a series of movies, not one single movie. It was unlikely that any of them would be killed off in this movie, but in the sequels, it is a possibility, especially if there is a limited number of movies - like a trilogy. A more likely possibility than it is in a TV show. (And anyway, characters being killed off is not the only issue I mentioned.)Oh please, not THIS "argument." In every movie, the audience knows that the majority of main characters are going to survive, whether we've seen the character's future or not. It's usually a twist if the character dies. Going into the theatre, you know that Kirk, Spock, and McCoy aren't going to be killed off. So is there REALLY suspense from that? Did anyone REALLY think "Oh wow, one of these main iconic characters might be killed off in this film because their future is uncertain in this reality?" The answer is "no."We already know exactly what happened to all [the Prime universe] characters afterwards. How could you possibly create any suspense? What would be the next movies be about?
A skilled director can create "suspense" (although I wouldn't have called ST09 "suspenseful") no matter what we know about the character's future.
Um, no, they don't. What kind of movies do you watch?In every movie, the audience knows that the majority of main characters are going to survive, whether we've seen the character's future or not.
Well, duh. That's the point, movies have to have twists (whether it is a character's death or something different) to be at least somewhat exciting, rather than utterly predictable (even if you prefer to watch the predictable ones). And twists are rarely possible when we already know the future.It's usually a twist if the character dies.
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