Piller isn't writing about a movie like Star Trek (2009). His complaint concerns movies where the major set pieces are crafted, and then a screenwriter is brought in to add characters, dialogue, and all that other stuff. Star Trek (2009) wasn't written like that, not to my knowledge. Another Orci/Kurtzman penned movie, however, was: Transformers 2: Revenge of the Fallen.
Piller isn't writing about a movie like Star Trek (2009). His complaint concerns movies where the major set pieces are crafted, and then a screenwriter is brought in to add characters, dialogue, and all that other stuff. Star Trek (2009) wasn't written like that, not to my knowledge. Another Orci/Kurtzman penned movie, however, was: Transformers 2: Revenge of the Fallen.
Exactly. ST'09 is not the kind of movie Piller is talking about; yes, it's action-packed, but it has a very strong, clear, character-driven dramatic storyline. Piller wasn't saying that action is bad; he was saying that the right way to do it is to start from character and let the action arise from the needs of the story, let it serve and inform the character arcs. And that's exactly what ST'09 did. Every action scene in that film was character-driven or story-driven. That's what makes a good action film. What Piller was complaining about was the type of film where the action comes first and the plot and character arcs are merely afterthoughts to tie it together.
As for T2:ROTF, that film was structured that way partly because it was developed during the writers' strike, so Michael Bay started by storyboarding the action scenes, and then once the strike was over, he brought in Kurtzman & Orci to add connective plot tissue (and then handed it to another writer who was responsible for adding the objectionable racial humor and so forth). The ST writing process is totally unlike that because K&O (and in the case of the next film, Lindelof) are producers on the film, working hand-in-hand with Abrams like a TV writing staff, so it's a far more writer-driven process from the beginning than is usual in Hollywood. Which is why ST'09 has such a good, solid story at its core despite its blockbuster excesses.
I disagree.
I don't think Piller was talking about a film's storyline being character driven vs action driven. I think his feeling was that a good film should be "about something".
Story is different than plot... and yes, Trek 2009's plot was driven by the young Kirk & Spock narrative and by Nero who's actions set the whole thing into motion.
But... what was it about?
...
Because, below the high tech, fast paced gloss, there really isn't much there. Before 2009 even the worst of Trek at least started from the attempt to be about something more that what's on the surface. They didn't always succeed, but at least they tried.
You just have to love Patrick Stewart!Patrick Stewart said:Could they be the Federation Executive Council? (Gene, stop spinning.)
Personally, I blame the majority of Nemesis faults at Staurt Baird's feet. It had a story by Rick Berman and Brent Spiner, two people who know how to do good Trek, and it was written by John Logan, an Oscar winning writing who also happened to be a pretty hardcore Trekkie. Baird, on the other hand, thought Geordi was an alien.![]()
Baird, on the other hand, thought Geordi was an alien.![]()
Baird, on the other hand, thought Geordi was an alien.![]()
Wait, what?
Personally, I blame the majority of Nemesis faults at Staurt Baird's feet. It had a story by Rick Berman and Brent Spiner, two people who know how to do good Trek, and it was written by John Logan, an Oscar winning writing who also happened to be a pretty hardcore Trekkie. Baird, on the other hand, thought Geordi was an alien.![]()
I thought Baird did a respectable job with the material he was given. Nemesis just had too many flaws in it's story to be credible (like a certain 2009 Trek production).
Baird, on the other hand, thought Geordi was an alien.![]()
For a show like Star Trek, where there are certain given parameters and character relationships, it's not uncommon that people can come up with similar ideas -- or arrive at similar approaches to material -- independently.Starting to think Michael Piller should have gotten a writing credit on Nemesis.
I don't.Personally, I blame the majority of Nemesis faults at Staurt Baird's feet.
Unless Baird had input into the script and story, he was basically just telling the actors where to go and how to emote. I can't see how his absence could have improved Nemesis that drastically.
Maybe, but I find it hard to belive that a man who has been nominated for 8 different writing awards ( 1 Tony which he won, 2 WGAs one of which he one (I swore I read that he won the Oscar for Gladiator, but apparently not this was for a TV script, 2 Oscars, and 2 BAFTAs) could have actually written something as bad as Nemesis. So I really think that it was a case of a bad director ruining a script. Personally, I actually like the story and alot of the ideas in Nem. it's just that it was so badly executed that I don't like it.Unless Baird had input into the script and story, he was basically just telling the actors where to go and how to emote. I can't see how his absence could have improved Nemesis that drastically.
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