^ I couldn't possibly comment.![]()
Well, be fair: they can save the hat. But the lens flares have got to go.
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I would pay good money to see Leonard Nimoy in that....
You're in luck. Leonard ran into a financial rough patch and agreed to model the hat for a modest fee:
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Not really.
But this happened:
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The two Abrams films are just about the most financially successful Trek films in history, not to mention among the most critically well-regarded. Their detractors like to pretend that the films were flops, but that's completely counterfactual. Hard evidence, not "speculation," shows clearly that these films are hits, more popular than any incarnation of Star Trek has been since the heyday of TNG two decades ago. There can be legitimate criticisms raised of their content and quality, but there is no denying their popularity with the mass audience. At this point it makes no sense to pretend they'll somehow be forgotten.
Yeah, like Star Wars, who the hell remembers that?The two Abrams films are just about the most financially successful Trek films in history, not to mention among the most critically well-regarded. Their detractors like to pretend that the films were flops, but that's completely counterfactual. Hard evidence, not "speculation," shows clearly that these films are hits, more popular than any incarnation of Star Trek has been since the heyday of TNG two decades ago. There can be legitimate criticisms raised of their content and quality, but there is no denying their popularity with the mass audience. At this point it makes no sense to pretend they'll somehow be forgotten.
Yes and no. They were indeed hits, popularly and financially. Critical reception was essentially "great popcorn fun" on average. But that's exactly the sort of film that is forgotten in the long run.
The two Abrams films are just about the most financially successful Trek films in history, not to mention among the most critically well-regarded. Their detractors like to pretend that the films were flops, but that's completely counterfactual. Hard evidence, not "speculation," shows clearly that these films are hits, more popular than any incarnation of Star Trek has been since the heyday of TNG two decades ago. There can be legitimate criticisms raised of their content and quality, but there is no denying their popularity with the mass audience. At this point it makes no sense to pretend they'll somehow be forgotten.
Yes and no. They were indeed hits, popularly and financially. Critical reception was essentially "great popcorn fun" on average. But that's exactly the sort of film that is forgotten in the long run.
Yeah, the same was said about "Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan" in 1982 -- and most of the critical fan reviews focused on the glaring continuity gaffes (The fact the Reliant's sensors could tell a planet had exploded, see the resulting debris field on approach, etc; that Khan says to Chekov - "I NEVER forget a face..." - yet the Chekov character wasn't IN "Space Seed" because the character wasn't added to the show until it's second season, etc.); but praised the film because even with all it's plotholes and continuity gaffes it was enjoyable and entertaining.
^^^
It really is a shame that even with those type of reviews, practically no one remembers "Star Trek II: THe Wrath of Khan" 32 years later...oh, wait!![]()
Yeah, the same was said about "Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan" in 1982
Beaker may be right or may not, none of us can read the future, but don't let's go pretending this is 1982. That tactic never persuades anyone because it's actually a meaningless and false comparison and the films involved are substantively different.
...none of us can read the future...
Actually I've recently been listening to the Superman radio series on the Internet Archive, and the original version of Superman's origin story was totally bizarre. Episode 1 tells the story of Jor-L (as his name was originally spelled) and the death of Krypton just as you'd expect, ending with the baby Kal-L being launched in a rocket from the dying planet -- but then episode 2 opens with an adult Superman arriving in that selfsame rocket in his full costume, somehow with a full knowledge of 1940s American English.
On the other hand, nuTrek has yet to give us the Trek version of Harley Quinn or Jimmy Olsen--a new breakout character who will be incorporated into future versions. Maybe next movie?
Yeah, the same was said about "Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan" in 1982
Uh, no.
Beaker may be right or may not, none of us can read the future, but don't let's go pretending this is 1982. That tactic never persuades anyone because it's actually a meaningless and false comparison and the films involved are substantively different.
I don't know. The criticisms were largely the same. That it wasn't as "cerebral" as TMP. That it was more violent and more about space battles and defeating a larger-than-life supervillain than about Gene's "utopian" vision and all that. That it played fast and loose with the continuity. (Wait, Khan's followers are now all blond Aryan youths?)
Hell, people threatened to boycott the movie because it killed Spock--which kinda makes killing Amanda small potatoes by comparison.![]()
Granted, it didn't reset the timeline, so there were no interminable debates about preserving the "canon," but, yeah, there's a fair amount of deja vu here for those of us who remember 1982 . . . and 1987 . . . .
I don't know. The criticisms were largely the same.
Christopher said:If the very next movie hadn't reversed [Spock's] death, there might still be a fair-sized contingent of Trekkies who rejected everything after TMP.
Just that the rhetoric of the people rejecting the films as "not real Trek" are very much the same.
Frankly, I think TWOK is an extremely stupid movie in a lot of ways, with a lot that doesn't make any sense, that throws out credibility in favor of melodrama, and that dwells too much on action and violence.
...I'm amused that one mostly sees this critique re-emerge in the modern day as a by-association method of "defending" STID -- and it's amusing in part because I think it's just as useless for that purpose as it was for attacking the film on its own merits originally. But mileage varies, obviously.)
You think the only time people have discussed plot holes from TWOK is after Into Darkness came out?
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