It's pretty much the trend now. Everything must be negatively analyzed.I still don't understand why some folks are so hung-up on a single image in a less than perfect Trailer, that appeared Five months before the show even aired?
Have they not seen the average Trailer put out for the last ten or fifteen years on other shows/movies?
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It's pretty much the trend now. Everything must be negatively analyzed.
What we need is a dark room for the negatives to be analyzed. But no one better turn on the lights suddenly or they'll be exposed.
…and there we go again.
What I’m seeing is that one cannot even criticize production/promotional output in constructive ways (such as the edit here as a suggested solution) without running into an ”alliance against criticism of Star Trek”. A fan is not the same as a highly-motivated supporter. Fandom serves as an external check to a property by using the enthusiasm to comment in ways a company can’t. If fans side against criticism to defend easily avoidable errors (as if Data’s face were so important to PIC it had to be shown in the trailer at all costs), then it only says something about their attitude towards the franchise: something is better than nothing; defend the fragile construct. It isn’t fragile and better is always better.
What we need is a dark room for the negatives to be analyzed. But no one better turn on the lights suddenly or they'll be exposed.
What about red lights?
I'm not against the fact that someone desires to criticize the show, by all means go right ahead.…and there we go again.
What I’m seeing is that one cannot even criticize production/promotional output in constructive ways (such as the edit here as a suggested solution) without running into an ”alliance against criticism of Star Trek”. A fan is not the same as a highly-motivated supporter. Fandom serves as an external check to a property by using the enthusiasm to comment in ways a company can’t. If fans side against criticism to defend easily avoidable errors (as if Data’s face were so important to PIC it had to be shown in the trailer at all costs), then it only says something about their attitude towards the franchise: something is better than nothing; defend the fragile construct. It isn’t fragile and better is always better.
I rather doubt that in the future anyone is going to be spending any time or energy bringing up the look of a trailer that appeared FIVE months before the show aired.
Exactly. Criticism is always welcome, but a trailer is not the place for it, in my opinion. Largely because it isn't the full product. To me, it just comes across as looking for a reason to not like the show before it airs.Once PICARD Airs, if somebody wants to tear it a new arsehole for crappy CGI, then knock yerself out, but I really don't see the need at this point to get all bent out of shape over a trailer with obvious unfinished CGI in it, that appeared five months before we see the final rendition.
Nothing has finalized CG 5 months before release, especially on TV.…and there we go again.
What I’m seeing is that one cannot even criticize production/promotional output in constructive ways (such as the edit here as a suggested solution) without running into an ”alliance against criticism of Star Trek”. A fan is not the same as a highly-motivated supporter. Fandom serves as an external check to a property by using the enthusiasm to comment in ways a company can’t. If fans side against criticism to defend easily avoidable errors (as if Data’s face were so important to PIC it had to be shown in the trailer at all costs), then it only says something about their attitude towards the franchise: something is better than nothing; defend the fragile construct. It isn’t fragile and better is always better.
Oh yeah... that had such crappy CGI in it that we've been complaining about that specifically for Twenty-seven Years.
Nothing has finalized CG 5 months before release, especially on TV.
Some shows it's done only a week or 2 before airing.
There's nothing wrong with showing unfinished work either.That’s beside the point since there is no law of physics demanding that a well-known makeup job be roughed out for a trailer at any cost. If it can’t be finished, what is wrong with a voice-based tease, as proposed by this edit?
Oh yeah... that had such crappy CGI in it that we've been complaining about that specifically for Twenty-seven Years.
It's so horrible that there's an entire thread about it here that has never been idle for all that time!
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There's nothing wrong with showing unfinished work either.
Ya know, yer really pizzin' into the wind with this, right?There is if it doesn’t match audience expectations, since then you’re not making the right impression, putting your best foot forward, but instead have to rely on patches explaining what’s temporary and what isn’t. Rogue One of course had a problem after the film was released, with a lot of people looking at the trailer and wondering what it said about the upheaval behind the scenes.
Again, there is a difference between having a ship explode in a better way or using a different take in the final version and trying to create this unexpected reappearance, only to have it sputter due to rough makeup combined with that legacy uniform.
The WoK trailer had star wars blaster sounds - what a horrible movie it turned out to be
Ya know, yer really pizzin' into the wind with this, right?
Methinks there's much better battles to be had and won.
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