• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

I am willing to bet that Q will be the villian in Trek 2.

Writing any type of story has it's challanges, though I've never done profossional writng I have done writing for things like PBEM's. You'll be suprised at how many drafts even a few pages can go through. Until you feel it is right.
 
Why on Earth would Q be in this movie? He has nothing to do with TOS, and the general moviegoer wouldn't know who he is anyway. That's not how you get Joe Q. Public's ass into a theater seat. That's why Klingons are being used; even my best friend who absolutely hates Star Trek and thinks it's retarded knows who the Klingons are. But I'm sure JJ will spin them in a different direction than what we fans have previously been used to; that's what he did with Nero and his crew.

Plus, the only time Q was ever really a true "villain" was in the first season of TNG. If a superbeing has the power to instantly kill you at any time, why doesn't he just do it? That's why omnipotent beings don't really work as good villains.

According to this Benedict Cumberbatch will be the villain. He is the only who has the right looks and manners to play Q.

I would think he'd be a better Soran than Q. But I wouldn't want to start unsubstantiated rumors...
 
Maybe Cumberbatch will play a starfleet bad guy? Maybe a renegade captain or something? Maybe he is plotting something with the Klingons, or he has found something important and wants to keep it for himself? Maybe he is a human terrorist leader who commandeers a ship or a planet.... we won't know the answer for a long time yet :)
 
Besides Q is too smart/complex of a villain for general audiences to digest.

Sigh. When the fuck did it happen that fans consider themselves smarter than the so called "general audience"? "They are too stupid to understand this and that." Geez.
November 22 2008, 08:38 PM (Pacific Daylight Time) - if not before.

Am i wrong to conclude that Q is going to be the villain?
http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/Unti...ar_Trek_sequel
According to this Benedict Cumberbatch will be the villain. He is the only who has the right looks and manners to play Q.
Let's see, now:
1. It was announced that Benedict Cumberbatch had been signed to be in the movie.
2. Early claims that Cumberbatch had been cast as a villain/the villain were promptly denied by J.J. Abrams.
3. It is your opinion that Cumberbatch is the only person named so far (among those supposed to have been cast) who would be suited to the role of Q.
4. Therefore, Cumberbatch must be playing Q.​
Yeah, I think you might be getting ahead of yourself, just a little.
 
Eloquent Dukhat. Given JJ's style and the theme of Star Trek he's not going to make some thought provoking drama. Look at Mission Impossible 3 and 4. High octane action films that moviegoers want to see over and over. In Trek 2 we'll probably seen a reimagining of the Klingons, space battles and more run and shoot scenes.
 
OP --

You seem to be saying "Cumberbatch would make a good Q, therefore he is Q".

Maybe he will be Q, but there is a big flaw in your logic. Just because Cumberbatch can perhpas be a good Q doesn't mean that Cumberbatch can't be good playing character who is NOT Q -- perhaps an all-new original character.

Personally, I think Cumberbatch would make a great Vulcan (perhaps a Vulcan Villain?), but that doesn't mean I think Cumberbatch will definitely be playing a Vulcan.
 
Last edited:
STAR TREK is not just for Trekkies--and was never supposed to be
And this would be where slash writers take their liberties and making Spock all fluffy, warm, ticklish, Kirk's (or McCoy's) bitch, with six nipples, and pregnant with a litter. I digress....:guffaw:
 
Q was a good television episode character but he would be a horrible movie character. I liked Q on television and even I wouldn't make it a priority to see that in the theaters.

I think Nero's attack on the Klingon's in Trek09 and the destruction of Vulcan is going to kick off a war.
 
What I mean by smart/complex is that I don't think general audiences will appreciate an omnipotent being who can challenge the crew of the enterprise and then at the conclusion of the film snap his fingers and undo everything the film was about, while simultaneously teaching the crew a lesson about life. It works for an episode alright. But i'm uncertain about having an omnipotent deus ex machina character in a movie.

And it doesn't get any smarter or more complex than Star Trek: Voyager!
 
I'd be willing to bet Q will not be the villain, nor will the Borg make an appearance. TNG's box office flame-out is still too recent. They'll avoid anything associated with it for a while yet.

Cumberbatch has the bone structure for a Klingon, Romulan or Vulcan. Rommies are out since we had them last time; Klingons seem to be due for some exposure.

The idea of a Vulcan villain is interesting as long as he's not too close to the Rommie idea. Cumberbatch needs to be playing a villain since he's playing a major character and there isn't room for yet another heroic major character in a mere two hour movie.

But still, my quatloos are on the turtleheads.
 
Amen. I'd hate them to do anything TNG related.
The reboot is all about bringing it back to basics.

And I like Klingons :confused:
Especially rebooted ones :techman:
 
Trelane is more likely than Q. I suspect they will save Q for the TNG reboot.

Don't hold your breath waiting for that.

Again with the Klingons! I'm so very, very tired of the Klingons. Personally I could do without them in the movie as well.

Ah, but Abrams is more concerned with the general audience, for whom the issue is not being tired of anything, but having heard enough to become intrigued. (He knows that Trekkies will go see the movie even if it's an all-singing, all-dancing tribble extraganza.)

The general public knows: Kirk, Spock, Enterprise, Vulcans, Romulans, Klingons, Khan, uh...at this point it all gets real foggy...so that's the universe from which Abrams will choose for the movies. Don't expect much more till Trek gets back on TV and has the luxury of playing to a more specialized audience.
 
The problem with Klingon's is over so many television episodes they've gradually been reduced to losers.

They need to be `reboot` as space Urah-kai - serious, ruthless, overly formidable bad asses, that simply can't get punched out by the likes of Patrick Stewart. Totally ferocious. Imperial. Terrifying. Lethal. Efficient hand to hand and weapon killers.

Warf = fail.
 
Besides Q is too smart/complex of a villain for general audiences to digest.

Sigh. When the fuck did it happen that fans consider themselves smarter than the so called "general audience"? "They are too stupid to understand this and that." Geez.

That's kind of an arrogant way to phrase it, but the notion is valid, that the general public knows certain surface things about Trek, and those are the things that can catch their attention and make a movie successful. It's not because they're stupid, just that nobody has time to pay attention to everything.

For instance, there's a Ghost Rider movie out now. I'm sure there are Ghost Rider fans who would scoff at my near-total ignorance of Ghost Rider lore. All I know is, it's some guy with some curse that makes his head burst into flames, and hey, I'm proud that I even know it's a curse and not just a bad skin condition. That's the level at which the general public understands Star Trek.

The problem with Klingon's is over so many television episodes they've gradually been reduced to losers.

They need to be `reboot` as space Urah-kai - serious, ruthless, overly formidable bad asses, that simply can't get punched out by the likes of Patrick Stewart. Totally ferocious. Imperial. Terrifying. Lethal. Efficient hand to hand and weapon killers.
Sure - and since the general public only knows Klingons as
"those funny forehead guys (wait, didn't they used to not have funny foreheads, or was that the other guys, with the ears?)", then they are eminently rebootable.

Warf = fail.
Spelling = fail. :D
 
I'll take that bet, OP. I have $1000 that says that Q will NOT be in the new movie. If you are right and he is in the movie, you'll get a grand from me. Willing to take the bet and give me a grand if he isn't?
 
... Cumberbatch needs to be playing a villain since he's playing a major character and there isn't room for yet another heroic major character in a mere two hour movie.

With respect, that’s another trite assumption (that you can’t do something in two plus "movie hours" that you can easily do in one "episode hour") that needs to be dropped post haste in my view (along with the "stupid masses" hypothesis of course). We’re unlikely to do anything we think is impossible and won’t even bother trying if we don’t think most people can appreciate it


The general public knows: Kirk, Spock, Enterprise, Vulcans, Romulans, Klingons, Khan, uh...at this point it all gets real foggy...so that's the universe from which Abrams will choose for the movies. Don't expect much more till Trek gets back on TV and has the luxury of playing to a more specialized audience.

That’s only because Mr Abrams appears to share your view of what is and isn’t possible, sadly. A Star Trek movie should be popular because it presents something worthwhile in an entertaining way. Not because it pushes the "right" emotional buttons, but little else. By the way, my view is that the fog actually drifts in before most people get to Khan, contrary to popular opinion here I guess.


Besides Q is too smart/complex of a villain for general audiences to digest.

Sigh. When the fuck did it happen that fans consider themselves smarter than the so called "general audience"? "They are too stupid to understand this and that." Geez.

That's kind of an arrogant way to phrase it, but the notion is valid, that the general public knows certain surface things about Trek, and those are the things that can catch their attention and make a movie successful. It's not because they're stupid, just that nobody has time to pay attention to everything..
The assumption was not that the general public don’t know enough about Star Trek, but that:

… I don't think general audiences will appreciate an omnipotent being who can challenge the crew of the enterprise and then at the conclusion of the film snap his fingers and undo everything the film was about, while simultaneously teaching the crew a lesson about life. It works for an episode alright. But i'm uncertain about having an omnipotent deus ex machina character in a movie.

Hmmm, you know, that sounds a bit like "A Christmas Carol". ;)

The question is why wouldn’t they appreciate that? Presumably because they aren’t smart enough. And why does it work for an episode, even if ST fans have not seen such a character before (unless they know Dickens of course)? Presumably because the people who watch ST are more intelligent and can cope with such things. Its trotting out those twin dogmas ("stupid masses" and "movie limitations") that got us STXI and will probably produce something similar next time. Well, that and the fear of losing money by doing something "risky" of course. Maybe JJ needs a smaller budget, not a bigger one, just to take the pressure off?
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top