They'd be fairly foolish to try turning out twenty-odd episodes of this series a season.
Why would that be foolish?
They'd be fairly foolish to try turning out twenty-odd episodes of this series a season.
Why would that be foolish?
Also less episodes means possible less money needed to be spent. So there is that.
Also less episodes means possible less money needed to be spent. So there is that.
I remember this very well too. This reminds me of the anticipation for STNG because it came after trek being away from tv for so long.That makes me feel old.I remember back in '86 and '87, when David Gerrold had a monthly column in Starlog talking about the development and casting and production of The Next Generation -- and then my surprise when he abruptly announced that he was leaving the show and there'd be no more columns. At the time, I think he explained that it was because he was pursuing the opportunity to develop a series of his own. It was years before I learned the real reasons for that unexpected departure. Let's hope there's less behind-the-scenes turbulence this time.
I remember this very well too. This reminds me of the anticipation for STNG because it came after trek being away from tv for so long.
A reboot would be a good opportunity to rework the fundamental background and history of the Trek universe in a more plausible way
At risk of repeating myself, I think the Trek frame itself is incapable of being totally plausible. It may be made more plausible, but only up to a point. The future we see unfolding before us is kind of branching off in two simultaneous directions. Ecological collapse due to limits-to-growth on the one hand and some sort of Terminator A.I. apocalypse or singularity (depending on your point of view). Other than Elon Musk's endeavors, I see very little movement forward with manned space programs. It's a very different world from the space-race era of the 60s.
So if you started with a blank slate and tried to present a future show, you would not have ships with warp drive being manned by hundreds of humans in a Horatio Hornblower tall-ships fashion. So right there at inception, Trek has to let go of its past reputation of being plausible speculative fiction and admit to being more of a science-fantasy with morality plays bolted into it.
I think Babylon 5 (at the time) tried to be a more grounded Star Trek. And isn't The Expanse also trying to do that these days? Not relying on as much magic science? I could see doing sort of an "Interstellar: The Series" But it would just never feel like Star Trek.
If a property is so broken you feel you have to change everything about it, then just call it something else and cut the umbilical cord.
In the meantime, Star Wars: The Force Awakens is the biggest grossing movie of all time on the basis of pure fanwank nostalgia, so it's really not even necessary to change things as long as they're not broken.
At risk of repeating myself, I think the Trek frame itself is incapable of being totally plausible. It may be made more plausible, but only up to a point.
So if you started with a blank slate and tried to present a future show, you would not have ships with warp drive being manned by hundreds of humans in a Horatio Hornblower tall-ships fashion. So right there at inception, Trek has to let go of its past reputation of being plausible speculative fiction and admit to being more of a science-fantasy with morality plays bolted into it.
I think Babylon 5 (at the time) tried to be a more grounded Star Trek.
And isn't The Expanse also trying to do that these days? Not relying on as much magic science? I could see doing sort of an "Interstellar: The Series" But it would just never feel like Star Trek.
If a property is so broken you feel you have to change everything about it, then just call it something else and cut the umbilical cord.
In the meantime, Star Wars: The Force Awakens is the biggest grossing movie of all time on the basis of pure fanwank nostalgia, so it's really not even necessary to change things as long as they're not broken.
Sure, but that's a problem for 50 years from now. The creators of a TV series in 2016 have to think about the audience from 2016, not the audience from 1966 or 1987 or 2066. Every work of science fiction will become outdated eventually, but you still ideally want to give your audience at least a few decades to feel that it's plausible and not dated.
Well, I'm sorry, but the makers of a multigajillion-dollar entertainment franchise are not going to base their decisions on the tastes of a single person.
They have to consider their entire target audience and make the choice that would be best for keeping the franchise popular and viable as it moves into the future.
And that does not mean pandering to the conservative tastes of fans of the older incarnations of the franchise. It's certainly possible to satisfy the nostalgia of old-guard fans while also rebooting a continuity -- as with the Marvel and DC screen universes and all the loving continuity nods they integrate -- but it's still necessary to focus first and foremost on bringing in a whole new audience, since the old audience is inevitably dwindling and will die out eventually. So you're entitled to your preferences, but that doesn't mean it's reasonable to expect you'll get what you want.
And it's a false postulate that the old continuity would be "jettisoned." As I said, plenty of reboots incorporate a wealth of ideas from earlier versions of the continuity, but rework and recontextualize them. It's a chance to keep the best parts of the continuity while casting aside the failed or unfortunate or embarrassing parts. And let's face it, Star Trek has plenty of those.
Actually a lot of Enterprise holds up very well.
A lot of fans have been rediscovering it and finding new merits in it.
When I was hired to write post-finale Enterprise novels, I rewatched the series twice, and I found that it worked much better when I moved beyond my initial "Oh, that's not what I expected/how I would've done it" reaction and just took it for what it was.
Certainly it had its weak points -- the whole second season meandered and lost its way, the treatment of sexuality tended to be sophomoric, and let's not even mention the finale -- but a lot of it was worthwhile and it added meaningfully to the continuity, really fleshing out races like the Vulcans and Andorians more richly than ever before.
There are tons of fanbases that are used to having multiple different continuities -- DC and Marvel fans, Sherlock Holmes fans, Godzilla fans, Transformers fans, Ninja Turtles fans, James Bond fans, Dracula and Frankenstein fans, etc. That's actually the norm, not the exception. Some fandoms embrace and celebrate their "multiverses."
I've always loved Star Trek's intricate continuity -- anyone who's read my books can tell that. But that's exactly why I'd like to see a whole new Star Trek continuity added to the mix. It wouldn't erase what came before. All the old shows and movies would still be there, and we'd still be doing books and comics to expand on them. But it would give us a whole new continuity to explore from the ground up alongside the old one. It would be more continuity, a continuity that could start from scratch and grow as we watched and add new ideas and reimagine old ideas in exciting new ways.
Maybe it's different for younger fans who came to Star Trek when it was already much more fully formed, but I've watched the ST universe expand and grow and evolve over the decades, experienced it not as some fixed whole but as a dynamic thing being made up as it went. And it would be exciting to see that process start over again, in a way that was completely unfettered and unpredictable. It's because I love the old continuity that I want to see a new continuity alongside it. So I just can't accept the notion that it's some kind of zero-sum conflict between the two. Star Trek is supposed to be about exploring strange new worlds, after all. The new doesn't invalidate or threaten the old, it enriches and complements it.
Sure, and I like that sort of thing too. But the alternative can also be fun. I don't understand this bizarre notion that fans have to choose one or the other. That's self-defeating and narrow-minded, like saying you're allowed to like either cake or pie but can't have both.
I enjoy the creative potential of building and evolving a pre-existing continuity, and I also enjoy the creative potential of starting fresh with a new take on a continuity. Both can be exciting and rewarding. And we've already had half a century of Star Trek exploring a single large continuity (though sometimes only in the most nominal sense and requiring a huge amount of squinting to pretend that two radically different interpretations fit together at all). We've done that already, quite extensively and fulfillingly. So now I'd be interested to see the alternative. Let's have both. Infinite diversity in infinite combinations.
Then they should set it in the old continuity since the target audience you speak of are those who watched the old shows on the various streaming services. That audience is the reason we're getting a new show in the first place.
Nope, that audience is getting older and dying. If that was the only audience for a new show then we'd just get a remaster and maybe a direct to video special combining the old casts in a fanwank special.
We're getting a new show because CBS wants to keep it's property valuable for the next 50 years. That means bringing in new viewers who will become just as passionate and keep watching for the next 50 years. Going back to the old continuity that their parents watched is an easy way to make the show irrelevant for the next generation.
Nope, that audience is getting older and dying.
The Abrams movies don't have the fanbase the old shows have. They can't shift merchandise for a start. It appears the viewers of these movies aren't particularly passionate about them to me.
The new show shouldn't be for any Trek fan, old or new; it should be for people who appreciate great TV story telling. I didn't especially have any desire to watch a show about a meth dealer in some Yank desert city but I did... cos it was very brilliantly done.
Enterprise was aimed at Trekkers. It was shit.
Who says all the people streaming the old shows are old and dying? I'm far from it, thanks.
The Abrams movies don't have the fanbase the old shows have. They can't shift merchandise for a start. It appears the viewers of these movies aren't particularly passionate about them to me.
Hell, that's how Star Trek has survived the last 50 years: people watched it. On re-runs. Now on Netflix. Hell, I was too young to see TNG on it's initial airing. Most people I know are in their 20s. No one of them has seen Star Trek on it's initial run.
YOu know what happens? They somehow get into it, whether it's their parents with whom they watched it for the first time, friends that recommend it to them, or hell, seeing the JJ-movies or through the freakin' big bang theory!
And what happens next? They check out the old stuff. A lot. I can assure you: everyone who is into Trek, the biggest bulk they have seen is the old stuff.
Setting the new series up as a (very loose) continuiation (in the same way as every Trek series was before) can only help. If you set it up as a follow-up to 800+ hours of television and movies, or as a follow-up to a (then) 6+ hours movie continuity makes no difference (although one of them offers more chances for cross-overs and guest appereances, and basically ALL references will be to traditionell Trek nonetheless).
So yeah. I would prefer it to be set in the old continuity. I can live with the new, but I see problems with that (the need to re-introduce basically all the recent Trek-staples like the Borg, holodecks, Caredassians and such for starters).
But all that means jack shit if the new show isn't able to stand on it's own feet, and attract new viewers by itself. (THEN being able to lead those new fans to tons of old television series for streaming is basically a cash cow in it's own right. But still, for this to happen the quality of the new series needs to come first, and everything else -timeline, continuity- needs to take a backseat)
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