You actually didn't know that Voyager would get home in the last episode ... like the rest of us did?A prequel sucks. I already know how everything ends!
You actually didn't know that Voyager would get home in the last episode ... like the rest of us did?A prequel sucks. I already know how everything ends!
It's not hard to buy though. You just go to this URL, put in your email and a password, and voila. I think I didn't even have to put in my credit card information until after the free week.Making something hard to buy is not the greatest idea.
Wasn't Apollo 13 a great movie? We all knew how it would end. The intrigue is in watching it unfold, all the nuances and details that are waiting to be enacted. I wouldn't mind a prequel, if they'd just do it right. Pick up where ENT left off. And be very, very sensitive to what didn't work with ENT. I'd love it. Going forward, beyond Voyager? That'll be a hard place to go at this point. There would have to be a completely new premise, something very unexpected and filled with enough potential to take it up to 7+ seasons.A prequel sucks. I already know how everything ends!
Instead, I'm gonna go rewatch 'The Measure of A Man' for the 58th time.
It's not hard to buy though. You just go to this URL, put in your email and a password, and voila. I think I didn't even have to put in my credit card information until after the free week.
I'd reply but that's too hardDoing anything aside from turning on the TV is considered hard by a lot of people.
I'd reply but that's too hard![]()
Post Voyager Trek is possible-the technology and money exists. Problem is they don't have the fanbase who has watched 21 seasons and 4 movies of Trek.
Correct me if I'm wrong but you seem to be saying that the reason TOS and ENT were cancelled and TNG, DS9, and VOY weren't was because the former weren't set in the 24th century and the latter were. I think that's a kind of simplistic hypothesis that ignores a myriad of other more influential factors that contributed to those shows' respective cancellations and successes. I don't think the time period has anything to do with it.I agree that's a problem.
But so is promoting the fiction that TOS was a golden age that must be recaptured. Nobody watched it, and it limped into a third season, before being cancelled. The last attempt to recapture TOS' alleged magic on TV was Enterprise, and it scarcely fared much better.
If I'm not mistaken the only time TV Trek wasn't under constant threat of cancellation was when it was set in the 24th century. It's not luck that 21 of the 28 seasons of TV Trek have been set in the 24th century, and I'm confused by the calcifying opinion in fandom that Trek can only move forward by forgetting this.
Please note I'm excluding the 13 feature films from this analysis because in my opinion, as far as Trek is concerned, what works on the big screen is the opposite of what has worked on the small screen.
Correct me if I'm wrong but you seem to be saying that the reason TOS and ENT were cancelled and TNG, DS9, and VOY weren't was because the former weren't set in the 24th century and the latter were. I think that's a kind of simplistic hypothesis that ignores a myriad of other more influential factors that contributed to those shows' respective cancellations and successes. I don't think the time period has anything to do with it.
Oh it's totally cool if you want to exclude the movies-though I adore First Contact personally.I agree that's a problem.
But so is promoting the fiction that TOS was a golden age that must be recaptured. Nobody watched it, and it limped into a third season, before being cancelled. The last attempt to recapture TOS' alleged magic on TV was Enterprise, and it scarcely fared much better.
If I'm not mistaken the only time TV Trek wasn't under constant threat of cancellation was when it was set in the 24th century. It's not luck that 21 of the 28 seasons of TV Trek have been set in the 24th century, and I'm confused by the calcifying opinion in fandom that Trek can only move forward by forgetting this.
Please note I'm excluding the 13 feature films from this analysis because in my opinion, as far as Trek is concerned, what works on the big screen is the opposite of what has worked on the small screen.
To be fair though, TOS became very successful in syndication and has enjoyed a critical and viewer reevaluation over the years. There are people born decades after its cancellation who discover it and it becomes their favorite series (i.e., me). Hell, even ENT is getting a little reevaluation these days (not nearly the same extent though). Granted the 24th century shows were more successful by numbers during their initial run, but I'd argue that only TNG has about the same pop culture influence or fixture in public consciousness as TOS. And with the trend of throwbacks and reboots these days, it only makes sense why they want to revisit the TOS era.That's certainly not what I meant to say. I'm trying to say that Trek in its 24th century iterations performed well enough on TV that all 3 of those shows lasted 7 seasons with no threats to their existence. Trek set in earlier timeframes did not enjoy this luxury.
What I mean is that there's a risk in trying to make every new Trek around the rose-tinted memories of a series that ended 47 years ago because nobody was watching it.
Or Bach. Or Beethoven. Or Shakespeare. Or Jules Verne.Oh it's totally cool if you want to exclude the movies-though I adore First Contact personally.
And your right-TOS wasn't some golden age-a sixties show that even Roddenberry abandoned at the beginning of its third season.
Honestly I think the execs and marketeers believe though that's the only Trek that has enough appeal/familiarity in mass consciousness to succeed.
They think that breaking from that and doing post-Voyager stuff will result in either failure or continually declining returns(only hardcore fans watch it-not enough general audiences so they are continually pumping money into a losing venture).
In the end though Trek has lasted a long time and is well known, it still has a fanbase that debates it's favorite episodes over and over again.
So the Trek fandom at least I can see lasting a long time-perhaps in the most optimistic terms-as long as their are fans of Sherlock Holmes.
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