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Describe YOUR new Star Trek series.

Nerys Myk said:
My choice for April was Sam Neill.

Merlin? With Science officer Gandalf and maybe Voldemort at Tactical?

I kid, I kid....he would be a great choice.

I've always thought as April as a mid-point between Kirk and Pike. Somebody a little younger and more cavalier than Bruce Greenwood, yet more reserved than young Shatner.
 
I've posted it many times: An anthology series consisting of four separate series, each set in a different trek period, that rotate, one a week.
Week 1: A series set during the Romulan War
Week 2: A series set in Kirk's time, but with a different ship and crew
Week 3: The adventures of the Enterprise B
Week 4: A series set at a new starbase in the gamma quadrant, post-Dominion War.
And back to another episode of the first series, etc.

trekseries6.jpg


:)

And please spare me the admonishments about its financial impracticality. I've been posting this idea for years, and I've heard it all. But we're blue-skying here.

I'm thinking four separate production units working from four standing sets, and sharing another stage for secondary sets, each producing only 1/4 as much material as a normal TV series and taking their time, might just give us some high-quality stuff. And no cross-overs! :lol:
 
I would love to see post-Dominion War literature take screen form. Why not just pick up where they left off? The scripts are essentially already written...

I would love to see 'Destiny' as a pilot to a TrekLit based reboot. It took three books, but it could totally be done in an 1.5 hour episode and if Voyager taught us anything, the Borg gotta go. Seeing the Voyager reboot novels and the Full Circle Project on-screen is a Trekkie's wet dream.

Ugh, no thanks. The post-Nemesis TNG stuff is pretty terrible. All that Borg stuff... no thanks


Though I have no desire to bring the Trek Lit stuff to TV. Much of the 24th century stuff just isn't very good, in my opinion.

100% agreed.


A series that just filled in the narrative gaps, in chronological order, would be amazing.

Hate to pick on you friend, but I don't like this idea either. A new series should move forward, not pick at the narrative scraps of Trek continuity just to please a few fans.


A Captain Pike, Cage-era series.

To quote a certain captain: "That would take us backwards. Our mission is to go forward...and it has only just begun."

Having dismissed other suggestions, I know I should be offering my own, but right at the moment - I'm not sure. Will have to have a think.
 
Wesley Crusher: Travellin' Man.


Fills in what happened between 'Journey's End' in TNG and Nemesis, told in flashback in Captain Picard's ready room where Wes just materialised in the nuddy for the Troi/Riker wedding.

I kid.

I like Nerys Myk's idea about seeing the Enterprise under Robert April a lot.
 
I too will repost what I have said in another thread.

Star Trek:
From the Ashes



Setting: 37th century. The old UFP splintered and collapsed nearly 1,200 years ago. The Galactic War lasting from the 26th through the 27th centuries was a huge conflict that further fragmented the galaxy. A new power structure was in place following the war but within 200 years it too had collapsed as the sentient races of the galaxy tore at one another with a ferocity that made even the Galactic War seem tame by comparison. Stars exploded into novas, consuming whole planets during this Final War. Empires were shattered and entire species were rendered extinct, even the victors were so battered that they lacked the resources to hold their empires together and once more collapsed back to a solely planet-bound existence with only antique sub-space radio allowing contact between systems. After nearly 600 years star flight was once more possible, and the wanderlust that had first inspired man to reach for the stars had once more come to the fore; starships began to be sent out once more to build a new union among races. It is now 150 years later and the dawn of the second United Federation of Planets is at hand.

The Familiar Locale: The Earth Confederacy Starship CSS Enterprise. Even after all this time the name of Enterprise has a special meaning for humans and the legend of the starships that have borne that name lives on. The current Enterprise is a multi-mission Command Cruiser that first went into service 18 years ago and is designated CC-171-M. Enterprise is approximately 430 meters in length and displaces 1.4 million tons. She has a crew of 615, primarily Earth humans but also a substantial number of humans from other planets and a smattering of allied aliens on detached duty aboard her. She is intended to be out in space for a period of five years followed by a one year long repair and refit period on Earth. The crew is usually rotated at this time. At this point in time a new crew has just reported for duty aboard her.

Changes: The Romulans, Cardassians, Founders, Borg, Tellarites and Ferengi no longer exist. These races were obliterated or blasted back to the Stone Age during the Final War. The Klingon Empire was destroyed, it’s worlds reduced to less than a dozen none of which has had star flight capability in centuries, although within the last 50 years an ancient Negh’Var class warship was discovered deep within the Klinzhai system. The Klingons have been struggling to re-learn the vessel’s secrets and are now ready to try and operate her. The major Earth allies remain Andor, Bajor and Vulcan although like everyone in the 37th century they are nowhere near as powerful as they once were. The major adversaries are the Tholian Hegemony, the Orion Corporate Authority and the Jem Hadar Imperium. Of the three the Jem Hadar are the most dangerous. Little more than ammunition used by the Founders in the 24th century they have built themselves into a formidable power following the fall of their former masters.

The Crew:

Fleet Captain Thomas V. Stuart – Commanding Officer, a Canadian in his mid forties. Tough when has to be but very fair-minded and passionate about the causes he believes in. Highly regarded within the Confederacy Star Navy, previously commanded the Patrol Corvette Lightning, the Exploration Frigate Calypso, the Light Cruiser Amethyst, and the Heavy Cruiser Ville de Paris. He is a veteran of hundreds of missions with a broad and mature view of alien life and culture. Divorced father of two.

Commander Marie Falcone – Executive Officer, an Italian in her late thirties. Ten years ago she was on the fast track to her first command, then she hit a wall when she was made the scapegoat for an Admiral’s screw-up and she was sidelined to “non-essential” duties. Since then she has been diligently working to resurrect her career from the Navy’s trash heap. Enterprise is her second chance and she’s determined to make the most of it.

Sub-Commander T’Vir, Vulcan Star Patrol detached duty with the ECSN – Second Officer, a Vulcan in her seventies. Granddaughter of the legendary Fleet Commander Sovor – widely considered the VSP’s finest captain – she seems to have inherited his genius in full measure. A high honor graduate of both the Vulcan Science and Star Academies, she has served in a wide variety of posts over the years, her last assignment having been command of a survey vessel. The assignment to Enterprise is considered a final polish before she moves on to a major command of her own.

Lieutenant Commander Lex Nakashima – Chief Engineering Officer, a Japanese/Korean in his late thirties. A true professional engineer, not a starship officer who just happens to be assigned to engineering. Directly commissioned from civilian life six years ago, previously he had been engineering professor and research engineer at the Montgomery Scott Institute of Technology from which he had graduated with two doctorates nine years earlier. Prior to his assignment as Enterprise chief engineer he had served as an engineering officer aboard the Patrol Corvette Speedy and as an engineering instructor at the Academy.

Lieutenant Commander Rene Lemercier – Chief Medical Officer. A Frenchman in his early forties. A dapper, friendly man with degrees in medicine, xeno-medicine and psychology. He has many connections to his fellow officers, was Stuart’s CMO on Amethyst, is friends with T’Vir’s mother, who was one of his instructors in medical school and served alongside Ernest Haynes – father of Catalina and Anton – when they were both at the start of their respective professions. He is currently studying for his degree in xeno-psychology.

Lieutenant Commander Ahmad Pasha – Science Officer, an Egyptian in his late twenties. Tall, stoic and mysterious best describe him. A student of both history as well as the sciences he is determined that studies of ancient civilizations are conducted with respect and do not degenerate into grave robbing as so often happened in his native land. A good practical as well as theoretical scientist he is working on a degree in engineering to supplement his Doctorate in Physics and Masters in Astronomy. Lt. Comdr. Nakashima is tutoring him and the two are on their way to becoming fast friends.

Lieutenant Catalina Haynes – Helm/Nav Officer, a Brazilian/American in her late twenties, half sister to Anton. If she had been born 17 centuries earlier she would have been one of those daredevil pilots that flew planes under bridges and through tunnels and such with mere millimeters to spare. She is able to get maneuvers out of Enterprise the book insists are flatly impossible. She is pretty much the same in her private life, if someone comes up with a new thrill, Cat will be first in line to try it. In addition her sexual appetite is the stuff of legend.

Lieutenant Anton Haynes – Communications Officer, a German/American in his mid twenties, half brother to Catalina. If Cat is first to test out new thrills, Anton is right behind her, but that is where the similarities end. Only a few years out of the Academy, Enterprise is his first deep space posting, having previously served at the ECSN’s central comm office for 2 years. He speaks over a dozen languages with varying degrees of fluency preferring to take the time to learn a language rather than relying on the universal translator.

Marine Captain Erin Doyle – CO Marine Detachment, an Irishwoman in her early thirties. Of average height and weight with dark auburn hair, hazel eyes and a trim, toned physique; few would suspect just how tough she really is. A brilliant ground tactician, superb marksman, unparalleled leader and master of five disciplines of unarmed combat; Erin is quite possibly the finest marine officer in the service today. Her troops hold her in near awe and would follow her if she decided to storm the gates of Hell armed only with a bucket of water. If trouble comes to Enterprise there is no one better able to deal with it.
 
Hate to pick on you friend, but I don't like this idea either. A new series should move forward, not pick at the narrative scraps of Trek continuity just to please a few fans.

If the stories are good then the general populace is going to enjoy it anyway no matter the setting. So why not please the fans?
 
Hate to pick on you friend, but I don't like this idea either. A new series should move forward, not pick at the narrative scraps of Trek continuity just to please a few fans.

If the stories are good then the general populace is going to enjoy it anyway no matter the setting. So why not please the fans?

I think all of the ideas are great to be honest...truth is, I'm gonna be happy if/when we get a new professionally produced series no matter what it is.

TrekSurvivor: I hope I've never given the impression that I require an apology for disagreeing with me! I appreciate your opinion.
 
Lots of interesting ideas. :)

I'd like to see an Enterprise in the series either way, though I do wonder how far they can get into the alphabet before it starts getting silly.

Just no reboots! I'm sure there are lots of ways a clever writer can bring new viewers up to speed on key events of every previous series without driving them away.
 
Just no reboots!

I agree. People talk about reboots and being "free" from existing canon. However, this just exemplifies to me that generally reboots are the result of lazy writing (Yes, I'm looking at you J.J. Abrams). There's nothing wrong with developing amazing stories within the framework of existing canon. It just requires some effort and creativity.
 
This thread inspired a conversation about 'reboots' and their impact on creative media between myself and some other word nerds. It has been a reasonably intellectually stimulating conversation so far.
 
I agree. People talk about reboots and being "free" from existing canon. However, this just exemplifies to me that generally reboots are the result of lazy writing (Yes, I'm looking at you J.J. Abrams). There's nothing wrong with developing amazing stories within the framework of existing canon. It just requires some effort and creativity.

There's no real drama in a Kirk story if we already know how his life plays out. Which is why you reboot. I tend to think it's lazy to build on shoddy spinoff right on top of another.

I just finished Q, Squared and the most interesting parts of it were the time tracks where Peter David wasn't beholden to putting the pieces back in the toybox just the way he found them.
 
This thread inspired a conversation about 'reboots' and their impact on creative media between myself and some other word nerds. It has been a reasonably intellectually stimulating conversation so far.

Most reboots, to me anyway, cheapen the franchise they are rebooting. For example, I'd consider Batman Begins the 'definitive' Batman origin story (didn't care much for the subsequent films but that's not relevant here), no need to tell it again, just have future films based on that starting point. Yet part of me knows that it'll be retold in 10 years time or whenever Ben Affleck gives up the role. To me, it's starting to feel pointless getting attached to anything because somewhere down the line it'll start over again.

I think for potential future Star Trek series, the further into the timeline it goes the harder a new spin-off would be. There's 70-ish years between TOS and TNG to explore, but the post-DS9 and Voyager era would perhaps require another jump forward in time (Star Trek: The Next Next Generation) to give itself breathing room ... and perhaps it's been too long now since that era of Star Trek was on the screen? Would it feel like a nostalgia trip rather than a new start?
 
Several ideas, in chronological order:

"Titan" - Set from 2265 onwards, follows Number One's promotion to Captain and CO of the new Titan-Class deep-space explorer (which looks like the proposed "Planet of the Titans" redesign for the Enterprise, hence the name). Colt would be alongside her, serving as Security Chief. They were at least four months beyond the boundaries of Federation space when Pike sought to return to Talos--which is why he never asked his trusted former-XO to help him.

"Gateway" - Set from 2273 onwards (so TMP uniforms galore), which sees a highly-classified Starfleet/civilian project to study and understand the first Iconia Gateway discovered. A catastrophic solar incident sees the team having to step through the Gateway into an unknown region of space in order to survive, where they face new struggles and marvels without the resources of Starfleet or even the luxury of knowing just where in the universe they are.

"Boudicca" - Set from 2349 onwards on the New Orleans-Class Boudicca, under the command of newly promoted Captain Alynna Nechayev. It charts her rise through the Cardassian wars which sets her on the path to becoming one of the most important members of the Starfleet admiralty.

"Orion" - Set during the Dominion War onboard the Constellation-Class Orion, downgraded from the frontlines to act as an escort/supply/medical/courier ship. It is filled with a motely crew who aren't the best and brightest, who have issues and problems on other ships, so they are dumped on this bucket of bolts as a way to make them useful in some small capacity.
 
I'd like to see something take place after Generations, that completely and totally ignore the following TNG movies (as well as the Enterprise finale with Riker and Troi) and gives us better wardrobe and an Enterprise worth a damn (I'll pass on that artsy squashed frog). Maybe even relaunch it with another Galaxy class ship, like the Defiant had done.

Not a full series, but limited episodes kind of like Showtime, where we tie up loose ends and much like how peace was made with the Klingons and we had the first Klingon serving in Starfleet, peace is made finally with the Romulans (of ourse involving Spock and we see the aftershock of the Dominion war and the toll it took.

Just tie it up, don't leave big loose ends for future films, just close the book in a GOOD WAY, not that shitty Nemesis way.

The big questions are what to do about Worf, what to do about Data (should Brent get back in like Arnold di dfor the Terminator films, or should we age an andriod?), and whether or not to give Riker his own ship or have Picard move on to an admiral position, giving Riker command.
 
Star Trek: A Very Long Series of Meetings

Patrick Stewart stars as Jean-Luc Picard, Captain of the Enterprise-F. Join him and the crew, as they travel from planet to planet, attending important high level meetings that may or may not affect the entire galaxy. Each week a new planet, each week a new meeting. To keep the show fresh, there will be an educational 30 second spot at the end of each episode where Commander Data, played by Brent Spiner, will explain one tenet in Robert's Rules of Order to the viewing audience.
 
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