Meh, I'd still take all of ENT (especially the last two seasons) over all seven seasons of VOY.Well, the fourth season was pretty transparently subsidized to capitalize on DVD sales and maximize syndication revenue.No TV show that lasts four seasons can be considered a failure.
So it really lasted about three seasons on its own merits, which still isn't bad.
Also, it was dry, tedious, and all-around horrible.
Paramount should have stopped before they strangled the goose that generated so many golden eggs.
Let's hope that JJ's team has truly cloned that original goose, and that they all promise to take better care of her this time around.
If it's Khan I'll have even less interest in the sequel than I did in the original. What's the point in rebooting a franchise if your going to rehash old ideas?
Paramount should have stopped before they strangled the goose that generated so many golden eggs.
Let's hope that JJ's team has truly cloned that original goose, and that they all promise to take better care of her this time around.
Not a clone I’m afraid, unless they gave it a heart transplant from some nondescript donor. Seems more like a cautionary tell about the dangers of genetic engineering.![]()
Well, the fourth season was pretty transparently subsidized to capitalize on DVD sales and maximize syndication revenue.No TV show that lasts four seasons can be considered a failure.
So it really lasted about three seasons on its own merits, which still isn't bad.
Also, it was dry, tedious, and all-around horrible.
Paramount should have stopped before they strangled the goose that generated so many golden eggs.
Paramount should have stopped before they strangled the goose that generated so many golden eggs.
From a business point-of-view, though, is that really true?
I'm going to have to check these comics out if I get a chance.
So was running Star Trek into the ground to make a bunch of money for some suits worth leaving a bad taste in my (and many other fans') mouths for years on end?
Obviously, I say no.
Go ask the suits. You might get a different answer.![]()
Although Khan IS in this movie
If you say so. I prefer to withhold concrete statements like that until I learn more about the story.
I hope Khan ISN'T in it, if you want me to be honest. It'd be lazy and unimaginative for a guy like J.J. Abrams to rehash the Khan character in the (what a surprise) second film of the new TREK movie franchise and I expect more and better out of him. But the truth is NONE of us in the general public know for sure. He may be. He may not be.
I'm leaning more towards a big fat "nope." But hey. I'll happily eat crow if my ass is wrong.
Meh, I'd still take all of ENT (especially the last two seasons) over all seven seasons of VOY.Well, the fourth season was pretty transparently subsidized to capitalize on DVD sales and maximize syndication revenue.No TV show that lasts four seasons can be considered a failure.
So it really lasted about three seasons on its own merits, which still isn't bad.
Also, it was dry, tedious, and all-around horrible.
As for smooth-forehead Klingons, they could use that idea in this movie without much explanation at all. McCoy: "He's a Klingon, Jim, cleverly disguised to appear human!" That takes about two seconds to say, and it's all they'd need.
Darvin was disguised as a human in Trouble with Tribbles - McCoy had to scan him to realize his true nature. So, bumpy forehead or smooth, Klingons do need to be disguised to pass as humans.
But I wasn't saying that McCoy needed to explain the lack of bumps. He could simply say that a naturally smooth headed Klingon was disguised as human, that's all. Just like the "other" McCoy did.![]()
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