Star Trek just kind of accidentally stumbled into a great model for running a science fiction franchise. After the TV series got canceled by the network (well, a decade after) the success of "Star Wars" turned a series relaunch into a film franchise. Concurrent to that, Paramount rolled out a syndicated series with a new cast.
In a perfect world, the TNG movies would have taken off and Picard, et al, would have had 5 or 6 highly profitable film adventures while Janeway, et al, slogged along on the small screen. Then Archer, et al, would take over the TV while Voyager had big budget adventures on the silver screen. That didn't happen, of course, because someone involved with the production was retarded (which is another thread for another time) but it was a neat idea.
And if the studio monkeys at MGM had been smarter, that would have been the model for Stargate too. At the end of Season 5 (or 6, or n), SG1 would have moved to the big screen and they'd have started a new TV series with a fresh (and much cheaper and younger) cast. Lather, rinse, repeat.
Which (FINALLY) gets me to Doctor Who. Yes, they did the horrible and odd Peter Cushing movie. But in a perfect world, the BBC would have a film arm and before each Doctor regenerated, he would have an adventure with no companion, leaving the door open for a series of big budget movie adventures set in that time frame.
In a perfect world, the TNG movies would have taken off and Picard, et al, would have had 5 or 6 highly profitable film adventures while Janeway, et al, slogged along on the small screen. Then Archer, et al, would take over the TV while Voyager had big budget adventures on the silver screen. That didn't happen, of course, because someone involved with the production was retarded (which is another thread for another time) but it was a neat idea.
And if the studio monkeys at MGM had been smarter, that would have been the model for Stargate too. At the end of Season 5 (or 6, or n), SG1 would have moved to the big screen and they'd have started a new TV series with a fresh (and much cheaper and younger) cast. Lather, rinse, repeat.
Which (FINALLY) gets me to Doctor Who. Yes, they did the horrible and odd Peter Cushing movie. But in a perfect world, the BBC would have a film arm and before each Doctor regenerated, he would have an adventure with no companion, leaving the door open for a series of big budget movie adventures set in that time frame.