^
^^ Well, frankly the film will need new fans to make money.
I don't consider people who just go and see the movie 'fans'.I suppose the level of fandom is the question. I'm talking about attracting new people who simply want to see this film -- and possibly a sequel -- as opposed to attracting new fans to the existing fanbase.
Indeed. When I was a kid I was a huge Get Smart fan. So when I saw the movie there were some jokes that only I got because they were some of the more obscure references.I doubt the audience for the Get Smart remake was comprised of old-school Don Adams diehards (in fact, probably the total opposite).
When that recent Iron Man movie came out, you had tonnes of people who wouldn't have read a comic book in their life queuing round the block to see it. Same with the Dark Knight.
Paramount will probably advertise the hell out of Trek XI. I doubt the audience for the Get Smart remake was comprised of old-school Don Adams diehards (in fact, probably the total opposite). TPTB will target Abrams' film for a mass audience.
But comic book characters generally appeal to 14-18 year old boys.
What? The teenaged boys still went to see all of these movies.Clone wars sucked, and I can't say much better of PM, AOTC, or ROTS. So people see space and they think die-hard loser fans. not something that teenage boys want to be seen buying tickets for.
When Iron Man was being advertised, my know-it-all friend confidently said it would flop because "who has ever heard of Iron Man?" I told him he was full of it (as I often doI remain sceptical that this film can attract a younger (or new) fanbase which was not there before.
Obviously, Trekkies will flock to see the film, but newbies will likely be put off by the (what they see as a) burden of 40 years of established heritage.
When Iron Man was being advertised, my know-it-all friend confidently said it would flop because "who has ever heard of Iron Man?" I told him he was full of it (as I often doI remain sceptical that this film can attract a younger (or new) fanbase which was not there before.) and if it were a compelling story with a fun, well-acted lead character, it would be a big hit regardless of being low profile.
And if Iron Man could do that, why not Star Trek, which certainly is higher profile than a second-tier comic book character that non-comic-book readers are barely aware of at all?
Obviously, Trekkies will flock to see the film, but newbies will likely be put off by the (what they see as a) burden of 40 years of established heritage.
Only established fans would worry about the 40 year "burden." New fans may or may not check out the old stuff. How many people who went to see Iron Man are bothering to read the comics? Not many. It doesn't matter anyway.
The main thing is that the creators of Iron Man knew and respected the source material, and understood its core appeal. If Star Trek turns out the same way, I will be happy, even if very few of the new fans bother with the old stuff. It's not like I'm getting royalties.
Past success of a genre breeds more success.
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