^^^No it's obvious from his Twitter rants that he's a narcissist who thinks he's entitled...
Or by way of contrast, you could post a link to the original STAR WARS, which came out at exactly the right time to cash in on the ENORMOUS interest in TREK, and essentially replaced TOS as 'the one' for tons of undiscerning fans. To me, the Abrams Treks have as much in common with SW as Trek, and represent a more direct connection to Lucas (GL, not JM) than Coon, Bennett, Meyer or GR. And if that has become the default mindset of trek for a bunch of people, then they probably fall into the same general set as those who were 'turned' by SW in 1977.
^^^No it's obvious from his Twitter rants that he's a narcissist who thinks he's entitled...
That must mean he IS a real Star Trek fan then, eh?![]()
You could say the same about James Cameron, but nothing he's done in the last 20 years rivals his TERM1 through T2 phase.
We could say quite a bit about Cameron but since he's not the topic of discussion, I'm not entirely sure what point you're attempting to make.
Star Trek and its sequel have made the better part of a billion dollars in theaters and hundreds of millions more in home video, expanded Trek audiences around the globe and garnered overwhelmingly positive reviews. It's never been more well-received than this.
Any other interpretation of the performance of these two films is sheer revisionism.
To pre-empt those who will still insist on giving another interpretation, this kind of success does not mean that it was a good movie.Just imagine how much better a real Star Trek movie would've done.
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Franklin said:I'll be honest, I'm not a SW fan. I saw it once in 1977 and it had no effect on me. It's still the only SW movie I ever saw or was interested in seeing. I'm 99.44 percent certain I won't see Abrams' SW. But if Trek has more in common with SW now because Abrams reignited it with a bit of the fun and action contained in SW, sobeit.
If a "real" Trek movie could have brought in the same (or more) money, there would have been no need to reboot the thing and start over.
Forget it Jake, it's Chinatown.I don't care. It's just fun arguing.
Now you're talking my language.
Like I said Roman Polanski hasn't made a great film since Chinatown.
The Pianist and The Ninth Gate are both better films. There, I've said it.![]()
Just imagine how much better a real Star Trek movie would've done.
Franklin said:I'll be honest, I'm not a SW fan. I saw it once in 1977 and it had no effect on me. It's still the only SW movie I ever saw or was interested in seeing. I'm 99.44 percent certain I won't see Abrams' SW. But if Trek has more in common with SW now because Abrams reignited it with a bit of the fun and action contained in SW, sobeit.
Aside from the sprinkles of fanservice and referentialism, Abrams' Trek movies basically were Star Wars movies. I don't see why you wouldn't enjoy Star Wars (or go to see his SW movies) if you enjoyed them. (Hell, I enjoyed them on that level, but then I've never expected Star Wars at its best to be anything much more than pulp adventure for kids. That was always the level it worked on.)
Just imagine how much better a real Star Trek movie would've done.
The kinds of things you folk call "real Star Trek movies" never do this well. Not that many people ever wanted to see them enough to pay money.![]()
Now EMPIRE is something else; I really liked it, even though I think it is structurally a mess. I won't say it is more mature than SW, but due perhaps to Kershner, it feels more like it is about something, rather than just lahdeR2dah. For whatever reason, there hasn't been more than a decent couple of reels of any SW made since Gary Kurtz stopped being on the scene.
The kinds of things you folk call "real Star Trek movies" never do this well.
If a "real" Trek movie could have brought in the same (or more) money, there would have been no need to reboot the thing and start over.
If a "real" Trek movie could have brought in the same (or more) money, there would have been no need to reboot the thing and start over.
This blame-the-audience shtick is as tired as references to JJ's ubiquitous lens flares. Are we to suppose that the poor execs would give us a "real" Trek story, but cannot deliver a film that is both profitable and really Star Trek? What a low opinion some fans must have of Star Trek to even say stuff like this.
I agree that it was time for a reboot, but not because they needed to escape from "real" Star Trek, but because it needed a break from the obsession with canon and the weight of keeping all those "historical facts" in balance.
If, however, we were to agree that one cannot do "real" Trek on the big screen (why we could not is beyond me, but if we did agree), this raises the question of whether it would be better served by a return to the small screen.
To pre-empt those who will still insist on giving another interpretation, this kind of success does not mean that it was a good movie.
Are we to suppose that the poor execs would give us a "real" Trek story, but cannot deliver a film that is both profitable and really Star Trek?
If a "real" Trek movie could have brought in the same (or more) money, there would have been no need to reboot the thing and start over.
This blame-the-audience shtick is as tired as references to JJ's ubiquitous lens flares. Are we to suppose that the poor execs would give us a "real" Trek story, but cannot deliver a film that is both profitable and really Star Trek? What a low opinion some fans must have of Star Trek to even say stuff like this.
I agree that it was time for a reboot, but not because they needed to escape from "real" Star Trek, but because it needed a break from the obsession with canon and the weight of keeping all those "historical facts" in balance.
If, however, we were to agree that one cannot do "real" Trek on the big screen (why we could not is beyond me, but if we did agree), this raises the question of whether it would be better served by a return to the small screen.
Do tell, what is "really Star Trek?"
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