If that's a post from TrekMovie, then perhaps you could provide a link to the page on which it appears?Radom guy found this post from trekmovie:<snip>
If that's a post from TrekMovie, then perhaps you could provide a link to the page on which it appears?Radom guy found this post from trekmovie:<snip>
Then I guess every Trek writer that employed the same trope is a hack?
Radom guy found this post from trekmovie:
Roberto Orci . Filmography ( Abrams movies not included)
As writer
Legend of zorro. 26% in rottentomatoes
The island 40%
Transformers 57%
Transformers 2 20%
Cowboy and aliens 57%
As producer
Now you see me 50%
Eagle eye 26%
Ender 60%
And right now, Orci is the main writer producer for ST 2016.
So, a good anniversary trek movie is a fool dream, if trek has not a new producers and writers , and it has not.
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I can not agree more with this random user. Now that JJ is gone. We all should be worried and like most people have pointed out . A trek film can not survive at the box office with poor ratings. It is not Star Wars or The Hobbit.
If that's a post from TrekMovie, then perhaps you could provide a link to the page on which it appears?Radom guy found this post from trekmovie:<snip>
I enjoyed The Island, Transformers, Cowboys and Aliens and Eagle Eye.
Then I guess every Trek writer that employed the same trope is a hack?
I don't think as many Trek writers have employed the same trope as you're pretending. Makeshift is correct that it's a bad idea, and I'd certainly be willing to say that's so regardless of who employed it.
Now that he is gone, I do think trouble is ahead.
It's too bad four years wasn't enough for these geniuses.
That kind of works under the assumption they worked on the screenplay for four years (which they didn't since it was only four years between the two films) and that the studio and Abrams accepted the script exactly as they turned it in with no changes.
I don't need to insult anyone involved in the production, either the movie works for me or it doesn't. If it doesn't I go on to something else I enjoy.
Then I guess every Trek writer that employed the same trope is a hack?
I don't think as many Trek writers have employed the same trope as you're pretending. Makeshift is correct that it's a bad idea, and I'd certainly be willing to say that's so regardless of who employed it.
But he already did that. Twice.Plus, Abrams will still be involved in the next film as he is already signed to produce and he isn't going to let a shitty Trek film get to the public from his Bad Robot production company.
But he already did that. Twice.Plus, Abrams will still be involved in the next film as he is already signed to produce and he isn't going to let a shitty Trek film get to the public from his Bad Robot production company.
More mediocre than shitty, and Hollywood thrives on mediocre because it's safe. The only Bad Robot production to exceed from that is GHOST PROTOCOL, which was surprising even for me because of how lousy III was, but I suppose having the Brad Bird factor elevated things. I wish he would direct the next Trek film, as he has the right sensibilities.
Said this upthread: STID feels like two movies compressed into a single one. The last act feels like a lot of sequel concepts that were cored and compressed into final act of the first film. Khan's part fills bigger than what we got. I rarely want to see the progression of a story from draft to screen, but I'd love to see the 1st drafts to shooting drafts of this movie.
So what?
Going by that, people like TRANSFORMERS more than GHOST PROTOCOL.
So what?
Going by that, people like TRANSFORMERS more than GHOST PROTOCOL.
I'm talking about actual viewer ratings not box office. None of the Transformers movies were ahead of Ghost Protocol.
So what?
Going by that, people like TRANSFORMERS more than GHOST PROTOCOL.
I'm talking about actual viewer ratings not box office. None of the Transformers movies were ahead of Ghost Protocol.
I was talking about viewer ratings. Rotten Tomatoes has people vote for TRANSFORMERS at 85% over GHOST PROTOCOL'S 76%.
That would be my choice, but on the other hand I wouldn't want to telegraph: HEY EVERYBODY IT'S KHAN!!!! So casting a non Indian makes some sense.It's decades later, and I'm assuming they could have found an actor who would have actually been Indian (or at least a very close visual match).Nerys Myk said:So yes to brown face and a Spanish accent for character who's supposed to be a Sikh and an Indian?
Not really, since author's intent is she's an "expert". The writers obviously aren't, though.I'm not saying they weren't. Saying Marla was an idiot is a possible in-universe explanation for her statements and actions.No, the writers and producers of "Space Seed" were idiots. They wrote the line about Khan being a Sikh, yet ignored the recommendations of DeForest Research about proper Sikh names and appearance (Khan and Noonien are not Sikh names and nothing about Khan's appearance says Sikh or even Indian).
He says records were lost. Though that seems to be contradicted later in the episode, when they produce a picture of Khan and detailed history of what he did and where he did it.According to Spock, there was much knowledge that was lost due to the wars (and presumably the breakdown of society; physical libraries would have remained intact only up to the point where people needed paper as fuel more than they wanted to preserve the knowledge in them).
I enjoy studying about the early Roman empire, which was around for a very long time. There were highly literate people in that society who wrote histories of their past and books about their contemporary society. Yet there's a great deal of knowledge that was lost due to fires, wars, earthquakes, and so on. Even today, with the advanced technologies we have for dating and analysis, there will always be some knowledge of that society that we will never know, and can only guess at.
The first two books make it plain that Khan was born in India, to an Indian mother3. Greg Cox did such a wonderful job with his Khan trilogy, I don't even think about what skin tone Ricardo Montalban really was (in fact, I never knew he was any tone other than those he portrayed in "Space Seed" or Bonanza until I saw him on Fantasy Island)
The first two books were fanwankery to the extreme. The third book was excellent.
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