Perhaps the respective general publics just preferred Kirk and Spock to Picard and Data.ST:TMP and ST V also got "bad reviews". But very good opening night and opening week attendances.
Perhaps the respective general publics just preferred Kirk and Spock to Picard and Data.ST:TMP and ST V also got "bad reviews". But very good opening night and opening week attendances.
Perhaps the respective general publics just preferred Kirk and Spock to Picard and Data.
You're still not making the case that fans were responsible for Nemesis going down the tubes.
Also, you seemed to offer up what supposedly happened to Nemesis as if it were part of the rationale for the STXII NDA's. That's something else I have a hard time buying, beyond the question of whether pre-release bad-mouthing had anything to do with box-office performance, either on opening night or in total.
And that's where you kind of loose the rest of us: "bad word of mouth" mainly only existed in the trek fan internet community. Outside of the TrekBBS/TNZ/Trektoday circuit, most of the people who went to see the movie only knew the basics: that it involved Romulans and an android other than Data (we all assumed it was Lore). More detailed information surely existed, but I don't personally know anyone who was actively looking for it, nor do I know anyone who refrained from seeing the film because of it.You're still not making the case that fans were responsible for Nemesis going down the tubes.
I'm not necessarily trying to make such a case. I said it was the inability of the producers to keep the story and all versions of the script of "Nemesis" secret. Everything - absolutely everything - had been spoilerized, like no previous ST film, before release.
Many, many films sink due to bad word of mouth in the months before their release...
Instead we live in this kind of world:
"I wonder what's going on here?"
And Bad Robot's promo/marketing arm seems pretty adept at keeping things balanced just at that point for months at a time.Instead we live in this kind of world:
"I wonder what's going on here?"
Yeah, stop right there.
"I wonder what's going on here?"
There's publicity they can't buy.
Instead we live in this kind of world:
"I wonder what's going on here?"
Yeah, stop right there.
"I wonder what's going on here?"
There's publicity they can't buy.
While I'm loath to jump into bed with 'Legion too quickly...
While I'm loath to jump into bed with 'Legion too quickly!
And that's where you kind of loose the rest of us: "bad word of mouth" mainly only existed in the trek fan internet community.
Yea, plus, I'm sure every die hard like us posters here, has at least 3 or 4 friends that ask our opinion or plot knowledge of SciFi movies because they are more casual fans and trust our "expertise". So, that can really spread bad word of mouth quickly.And that's where you kind of loose the rest of us: "bad word of mouth" mainly only existed in the trek fan internet community.
I disagree. I had a lot of people assuming I was "done with Star Trek" in the months leading up to "Nemesis". Word was out that "even diehard Trekkies" were proclaiming the movie would be "a dud".
Months and months of Internet moaning and bitching had permeated beyond the inner circle.
And that's where you kind of loose the rest of us: "bad word of mouth" mainly only existed in the trek fan internet community.
I disagree. I had a lot of people assuming I was "done with Star Trek" in the months leading up to "Nemesis". Word was out that "even diehard Trekkies" were proclaiming the movie would be "a dud".
Months and months of Internet moaning and bitching had permeated beyond the inner circle.
Yea, plus, I'm sure every die hard like us posters here, has at least 3 or 4 friends that ask our opinion or plot knowledge of SciFi movies because they are more casual fans and trust our "expertise".
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