I see this sentiment a lot from those who didn't like the movie. And it brings back something I've been thinking for a while now.TOS also had a modicum of intelligence. Abrams left that out too.
Yes, TOS had "a modicum of intelligence" that was, I will admit, not fully present in STXI. So did TNG and DS9. Hell, even Voyager at its best had this certain depth to it, a feeling that the show could at times be more than simple entertainment. Abrams' movie didn't really have that. But you know what? NONE of the previous Trek movies had it in any great quantity, either. The only one that even aimed for something like that was TMP, and while its concepts were impressive, the movie itself was a boring, convoluted, melodramatic, slower-than-malfunctioning-maneuvering-thrusters mess (IMO, of course... others might love it, but it wasn't exactly a critical success, which spurred them to move in a different direction for TWOK). All nine of the movies that followed lacked a certain subtlety, a certain nuanced depth, either relating to emotion, morality, politics, science, whatever... It's something that all of the Trek shows had when at their best (as do the novels at THEIR best, actually), but that the movies discarded (for the most part, anyway; there are flashes of it here and there in some of the movies, but not to nearly the degree that it exists in the shows). That's why I never view the movies as the "primary" Trek storytelling vehicle, but as big, fun, action romp fests that were never meant to have the depth of the shows. To me, Abrams' movie was no better or worse than most of the others in that regard. All that separates the various Trek movies is simple quality of execution, and they certainly are not all on the same level there (and there is certainly no consensus on these boards as to which ones are good and which ones aren't). I feel that Abrams' movie can comfortably hang just below the top tier of Trek movies.
While my own story ideas aren't set nearly that far ahead, this is still an intriguing concept. The only problem with jumping that far into the future relative to TNG is that you start to wonder if it makes sense to even show humans (and other humanoids) in a way that allows us to relate to them. I can't remember who or in what thread, but someone mentioned that any Trek story set far enough ahead after TNG (anything in the realm of 100 years or more) would need to introduce some element of transhumanism, or a fundamental change of SOME sort to how humanoid species exist and interact with the universe, and I tend to agree.Enough prequels and reboots. A completely new series set about 200 years after Nemesis, when even the longest-lived Vulcan who was an adult in any previous story has been dust for decades.
Instead of traditional animation, I would do full CG. Everything; ships, backgrounds, effects, people. Avatar and FFVII: AC have shown that it's possible to do so and have it look really good these days, so I'd go that route over animation. Nothing against hand-drawn animation, mind you; I'm a fan of it. But I don't think it works too well for Trek. Never did. The blend of realism and stylization that one can achieve with high-end CG would be perfect, I think.For budget reasons the show would be animated rather than live action... The Federation would exist, but with quantum drive so that they could visit any inhabited planet in the galaxy within a reasonable travel time, say a year from one end of the galaxy to the other.
Funny you mention it taking a year to cross the galaxy. Based on some travel time figures in one of the Destiny trilogy books, I calculated out roughly how long it would take to cross from one side of the galaxy to the other via the quantum slipstream drive (which, later in the book, was successfully field-tested), and came up with just over one year.
No it doesn't, any more than you saying it ISN'T "fugly" makes that so. Aesthetics are purely opinion. I don't like that ship very much either.First, just because you don't like it and call it the "Fuglyprise" doesn't make that so.
I see absolutely nothing in that ship you linked to that is in any way more believable or realistic than most Trek ships. It's just yet another variant on the Trek ship concept.If I were going to do Trek, I'd like the ship to have some believability and a chance of being accepted as a real spacecraft - and that, frankly, means no more oldTrek stuff.
McQuarrie's probably isn't the way to go, but at least it's a start.
And what the heck does that even mean? What relevance do believability and realism have on the external VISUAL design of a space ship designed and built by the combined technical know-how of over a hundred fictional species that can travel FTL via a fictional method of propulsion, in a story set over 300 years (or over 200 years, for those of you who prefer 23rd century Trek

I question the idea that getting the people who worked on Avatar to work on Trek would somehow be such a great idea. Sure, it was a benchmark in visual effects. But the story was laughably simplistic, and as for vehicles (putting aside the mecha; hardly an exercise in believable realism, that), most were simply based on real vehicles, just extrapolated out in a logical way so that they looked appropriate to the future time-frame of the film. Given that Trek has always had vehicle designs that depart quite radically from real vehicles, how would looking to Avatar for future starship designs make any sense?Get the people who worked on Avatar in and ask them to design, you know, a spaceship that looks like it would work and see what they can come up with.
I don't think 1964 is a gold standard, personally. The best parts of Trek IMO are not TOS-related. But - even though Warped9 and I don't agree on whether or not STXI was good, or true to Trek (and I'm SURE he and I don't agree on what the best parts of pre-Abrams Trek areEither do something really different and more plausible or just leave the damned Franchise alone. Stop pretending that 1964 represents a gold standard that the studio should throw money at and that audiences should genuflect to. Abrams is already making excellent Star Trek within the broad confines of Trek and I don't think the studio needs fans mucking about with the minutiae.
