IDW should do an ongoing series that does for Star Trek what it does for Transformers and keeps the story moving forward. Pick a time-frame and stick with it.
The current "Burden of Knowledge" mini seems to be set in Year Four, but isn't called "Star Trek Year Four," just "Star Trek."
The current "Burden of Knowledge" mini seems to be set in Year Four, but isn't called "Star Trek Year Four," just "Star Trek."
What makes you say that? Are Arex or M'Ress in it by chance?
Is Chekov absent in any of the Y4 stuff or Burden of Knowledge?
IDW has a good relationship with Bad Robot and several of the people involved with the film like Kurtzman and Orci, who were involved not just with Star Trek: Countdown and Star Trek: Nero, but various Transformers movie-related comics as well. Building goodwill counts for a lot.How can they say that they're going to concentrate on NuTrek when the four NuTrek books were put on hold by Pocket, apparently because TPTB want to hold off on everything NuUniverse except prequels? Wishful thinking or do they get a pass that the prose offerings don't?
I tend to feel the same way--as do others, judging by the other comments in this thread. I'll pick up a miniseries here and there that interests me, but I don't feel particularly committed to IDW's output because I know the individual stories aren't building to anything, or even particularly connected.To be honest, I think the lack of anything ongoing, or even an ongoing series of mini-series, from IDW has been detrimental to them. Doing disconnected stories -- one-shots here (albeit under umbrella titles) and mini-series there -- amounts to throwing things at the wall to see what sticks. Yes, the multiplicity of settings and characters in the Star Trek universe is a benefit, but it's also a danger because it's easy to lose fan interest (and sales) by letting other settings and characters go neglected.
Ironically, given their position on stories which follow the new movie, what may have angered Abrams was the fact that the (first few) Alias novels were prequels, detailing how Sydney Bristow became a spy, and (with the many twists and turns and retcons in later seasons) it's pretty likely that those novels were rendered impossible to reconcile with continuity.Pocket has, in the past, had a rough relationship with Bad Robot; for instance, Bad Robot dragged its feet on the novelization. More telling may be something Margaret Clark talked about at Shore Leave in 2008, which was that the Alias novels angered J.J. Abrams and, as a result of that, Abrams wasn't kindly disposed toward Pocket and she was not expecting a good working relationship with Bad Robot. (Margaret did not say what, precisely, about the Alias novels angered Abrams.) It came as a surprise to me last summer that Pocket was pressing on with movie-Trek novels, and it came as no surprise that, reading between the lines, Bad Robot forced Pocket to spike them.
Thanks for the heads up AndyIt's what I feared would happen. Wonder what the odds of farming out TNG, DS9, etc. to another company are? Similar to the way Transformers are licensed comics with two publishers: IDW and Fun Publications.
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