I'm not a big fan of the "based on a true story" variety of movie because they're virtually GUARANTEED to have embellishments, omissions, and arbitrary conflict for entertainment purposes.
Same here. The "based on" movies about Batman, The Monkees and other TV series were an Olympic sized pool of recycled, long-debunked myths and flat out lies. Candy for the sleeping masses.
Dragon was horrible--as though it was made by fanbooys too geeked up on kissing Bruce Lee's ass than painting as true picture of the man. The scene about the making of The Green Hornet TV series was as accurate to real production accounts as Monopoloy money.For example, "Ali" and "Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story" got so many minor details wrong that it took me out of both movies. I'm sitting there watching Will Smith do a good Ali, but then I'm sitting there watching him run and run and I start thinking, "Why am I even watching this? I know Ali's story. And there are COUNTLESS Ali documentaries. I might as well watch the REAL Ali do his thing." And don't even get me started on "Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story"...
A dramatized mini-series about the creation of Star Trek would be for newbies.
Not for us.
Thanks to the quickie, thrill-a-minute / reality TV-minded culture we live in, a Making of Star Trek film would suffer the same fate as all other mentioned above.
A four hour documentary (in 2 parts) from researchers with no personal or fan bias (ex. anti-Shatner types) would be the best way to go.