No. That was really a half-assed reboot. The OP could be suggesting would could have been: a really visionary and daring reboot. It wouldn't have been TOS, but it could have been as forward thinking as TOS was in its day.Star Trek XI and beyond.
No. That was really a half-assed reboot. The OP could be suggesting would could have been: a really visionary and daring reboot. It wouldn't have been TOS, but it could have been as forward thinking as TOS was in its day.Star Trek XI and beyond.
The OP could be suggesting would could have been: a really visionary and daring reboot. It wouldn't have been TOS, but it could have been as forward thinking as TOS was in its day.
A show like Star Trek, made well now, would be more like Avatar visually and conceptually than anything else that's been done.
It also could not be done with the kind of naive moralizing that's part-and-parcel of the original.
Well then something like that could go in a number of directions. And who's to say it still can't happen after Abrams' Trek has run its course?The OP could be suggesting would could have been: a really visionary and daring reboot. It wouldn't have been TOS, but it could have been as forward thinking as TOS was in its day.
That's what I mean, yes.
For obvious reasons the TV franchise is on hold but my guess is that if Enterprise's performance didn't set it back we'd probably be watching a trek looking something like StarGate Universe. Dark, dreary, not a place you'd want to stick around. This restbid may have prevented that.In every one of its various forms, Star Trek is arguably an action-adventure series set in a somewhat coherent and idealized future as postulated in the 1960s. By being faithful to the original series, even the new Trek movie falls under this description.
What if Star Trek were to be reinvented today? Take the basic concept -- an action-adventure series set in a somewhat coherent and idealized future as postulated in the 2010s. What might the "star" spacecraft look like? How might the characters behave? What would their demographics be? What would the technology be like -- both on and off the ship? What might some of the thinly veiled social commentary consist of?
For example would our heroes continue to lug around bulky flip-open, audio-only personal communication devices, given today's hands-free cell phones? Would our heroes even explore a strange, new world on foot, given today's fledgelilng haptic-feedback and virtual reality technologies?
Esteemed moderators, please don't move this to the "Future of Trek" forum, because this is a purely hypothetical topic. Thanks!
Ditto. I also prefer a hero to be someone I can admire, not someone who is packing baggage or makes bad decision after bad decision and gets his butt whipped. If I wanted that I'd watch the typical cop show. I sure that there are so many stories to be told in the star trek universe that TPTB haven't even scratched the surface.idealized future as postulated in the 1960sSeem like we can have one or the other.much (obviously) darker
I would much rather have a hero leading the show, instead of a compromised dark unethical individual. No, maybe not the "treadly" way to go, but let's face it, you can only change the basic Star Trek concept just so far before it ceases to be Star Trek and turns into another space ship show, with a group of stranger who possess familiar names.
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I also prefer a hero to be someone I can admire, not someone who is packing baggage or makes bad decision after bad decision and gets his butt whipped. If I wanted that I'd watch the typical cop show. I sure that there are so many stories to be told in the star trek universe that TPTB haven't even scratched the surface.
A while back I had this great idea of a one character spin off, sort of a Mcgyver ( solving big Star fleet problems with a paper clip) in the Trek universe but no doubt they TPTB would never go for it. For some reason they're locked in a seven cast member mindset. Then there's the logistics problem. The need for reusable sets....but let's face it, you can only change the basic Star Trek concept just so far before it ceases to be Star Trek and turns into another space ship show, with a group of stranger who possess familiar names.
Another option is to ditch everything that came before and truly start over with a totally blank slate--as if Gene Roddenberry had never created Star Trek at all--and come with all new concepts, characters, and settings. Only the title "Star Trek" will remain, but everything else is fair game
Regardless of your personal feelings about how they did it, it's still Trek remade for 2009 and beyond...No. That was really a half-assed reboot.Star Trek XI and beyond.
I really don't think that would be a problem for TPTB, IMO. All of the Trek shows reused existing sets for various other ships and starbases. A new Trek series may indeed have a smaller cast--I don't think TOS really had "a big seven" until TWOK myself.Fezziwig said:A while back I had this great idea of a one character spin off, sort of a Mcgyver ( solving big Star fleet problems with a paper clip) in the Trek universe but no doubt they TPTB would never go for it. For some reason they're locked in a seven cast member mindset. Then there's the logistics problem. The need for reusable sets.C.E. Evans said:Another option is to ditch everything that came before and truly start over with a totally blank slate--as if Gene Roddenberry had never created Star Trek at all--and come with all new concepts, characters, and settings. Only the title "Star Trek" will remain, but everything else is fair game
I also prefer a hero to be someone I can admire, not someone who is packing baggage or makes bad decision after bad decision and gets his butt whipped. If I wanted that I'd watch the typical cop show. I sure that there are so many stories to be told in the star trek universe that TPTB haven't even scratched the surface.
It's probably a good thing Jeffrey Hunter as Christopher Pike didn't end up as the lead of STAR TREK, then. I'm sure his character would have changed as the series progressed, but in "The Cage" he's burnt out with starship command after some bad decisions that got people killed or injured. Definitely packing baggage, as you put it.
A show like Star Trek, made well now, would be more like Avatar visually and conceptually than anything else that's been done.
It also could not be done with the kind of naive moralizing that's part-and-parcel of the original.
A show that has zero humans as part of the main cast, and in which humans/the Federation are represented as the bad guys.What Might a "Truly New" STAR TREK Be Like?
No they wouldn't. nuBSG has what, 1.5-2 million fans at most? Hollywood knows that that is a flop and hence would never make anything like that.Temis the Red-Nosed Vorta said:If modern Hollywood attempted to produce Star Trek today, it would look a lot like Ron Moore's BSG - a lot of navel-gazing self-loathing bullshit. Thank grud modern Hollywood didn't produce Star Trek.
In every one of its various forms, Star Trek is arguably an action-adventure series set in a somewhat coherent and idealized future as postulated in the 1960s.
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