Holytomato said:
Star Trek XI should appeal to the hard core fans.
Remember how successful Nemesis and Enterprise were?
I think the interesting thing about grouping
Nemesis in this category is that some of its defenders state that it was
not tailored to a hardcore audience. Though its critics make the same assertion. I don't see what is so hardcore about the film personally, it has a few canon references, granted, but it's a nakedly designed action film with monstrous Orc-like foes and Patrick Stewart spinning around on a buggy. In short, it throws out the window much of what made TNG a success and Picard likeable to begin with. Maybe if the film
had tried something a bit more faithful - you know, a drama of ideas rather than fisticuffs where Picard's climax isn't running around like Rambo but giving a stirring oration - it could have been a better film.
And until its fan service inunudated fourth season (by which point it was dead already),
Enterprise was consciously directed at the general public. In the first season it even eschewed the
Star Trek prefix, and gave us a decidedly unconventional - and at the time, highly unpopular - piece of theme music.
Regardless, the reason both film and TV failed is that they were poor in quality. I tuned out of
Enterprise in the second season, not due to any continuity violation, but due to the truly noxious depths the series had sunk to with crudely stupid non-humour affairs such as 'A Night in Sickbay' or meandering, idiotic message dramas such as 'Stigma'. Now, I do not personally want
Star Trek to appeal to hardcore audiences. I just want a good movie - nothing more nor less than that. Canon to blazes; wry winks and obscure references can burn also. Just give me something I'll enjoy; I ask for nothing more nor less.
Anyone remember Edward de Vere (alias William Shakes-speare)? No. His friends didn't keep publishing his plays, nor did they make sure that people remembered that he wrote the plays not Will Shaxspure.
This hardly seems the time or place to debate the merits or demerits of the Oxfordian theory. But in the spirit of these proceedings, scholars
have been able to reconstruct one of Menander's plays,
The Grouch, and have retained fragments of many more. So there.
