Speaking of redux such as Batman and other examples of what is new is old. BatMan had been redone several times. Sometimes good. Sometimes, not so. How many actors casted as Wayne vs. Kirk?
>People forget that Spock was played by
five actors in ST III and I don't recall this being an outrage at the time.
First of all. This is silly comparison. Have one actor play different age ranges from a boy to adult, in this era was not possible. Second, we saw several Bruce Waynes. I do not think anyone is saying there cannot be a new 'Kirk'. I was simply pointing out that bigger budgets, hype, and all that sometimes lead to a diappointing product and I hope they have the sense to learn from their mistakes.
>We've had two Saaviks, and they switched appearances at a point in time that is rather weird for anyone watching ST II and ST III back-to-back. (Didn't a similar thing happen with Marty's girlfriend in the "Back to the Future" movies?)
Saavik was new minor character, not to mention. Back to Future? Hmmm. OK and overall - these types of sequels are never as good. I suppose they replaced characters in Police Academy series too, but I really quit counting.
>These are the same questions that fans were asking when they first heard about Star Trek: The Next Generation. Will it kill the franchise or destroy it? How can they make Star Trek without Kirk, Spock, et al? The Enterprise looks different...sacrilege!
...yeah and when I saw 'blunder at farpoint', I thought these critics were on to something. It got better.
>These are similar questions that fans were asking when they first heard about
Star Trek: The Mlotion Picture.
...from the Director of West Side Story, and the incredibly non action packed Andromeda Strain direct Star Trek on the heels of Star Wars? No offense, but not the best idea.