...soooo...
You'd object if they did include some little tid-bit after the credits???
I'm saying I don't care.
Yer such a stick-in-the-mud...
This place would be absolutely, down-right 'boring' with out you.

...soooo...
You'd object if they did include some little tid-bit after the credits???
I'm saying I don't care.
I remember reading that Abrams and co. thought about ending Star Trek with a shot of the S.S. Botany Bay floating in space.
I'm glad that didn't happen, because it would have been fanwankingly stupid. None of the casual moviegoing audience would have known that it was Khan's ship (and if they did, they probably wouldn't have cared)
^Actually, that would be Star Trek.
You didn't need to have seen "The City on the Edge of Forever" to enjoy "Trouble with Tribbles" when ST first aired. You didn't need to know any backstory to follow the original episodes.
What's the point in using the name "Star Trek" and the names of the original characters if you ignore everything that came before?
But if the audience's perception is that they need to know that "rich backstory" to enjoy the movie, you get people avoiding it altogether.Star Trek has such a rich backstory that it would be plain stupid not to make use of it.
By that logic you would have to drop all Star Trek references whatsoever and make it a standalone movie with no backstory at all.
Same reason people keep publishing new versions of "Snow White", "Goldilocks", "Cinderella"...
But if the audience's perception is that they need to know that "rich backstory" to enjoy the movie, you get people avoiding it altogether.
Even the very first ST product, "The Cage", had a backstory. Pike's reminiscences of Mojave, his horse, Spock's limp, a dead male yeoman, a battle with a Kalar warrior...
I know, using a brand name to make lots of $€£
And they do! But if your audience is convinced that they need to know 50 years of back history, no amount of clever writing will get their bums on seats.Then the writers have to find a way to incorporate the backstory without making it too dominant. Some backstory can be explained in a line or two, just like they did in TWOK.
Have you visited this board's TrekLit section? Every fifth question to the board is "do I have to see/read that in order to enjoy this?"But people here seem to think that using the already existing backstory would confuse the audience.
And they did. CBS reported that sales of all ST boxed sets of ST DVDs went measurably up for several months following the release of JJ's movie in 2009. Even though it was set in a new timeline, sales for the old stuff improved as new fans went off to find out about what they'd missed out on seeing before.Some things can be explained on screen in a matter of seconds while providing cohesion within the Trekverse. And it would probably motivate the audience to dive deeper into the franchise.
Do you really want it to just die and there be no more "Star Trek"? It looked pretty ragged after "Nemesis" and "These Are the Voyages".
I just don't agree with the common opinion on this board that nuTrek has to have as little connection to Star Trek as possible because they think that the general audience is too stupid to understand some references.
It's "the common opinion on this board" that nuTrek must have "as little connection to Star Trek as possible"? Really? Literally?Do you really want it to just die and there be no more "Star Trek"? It looked pretty ragged after "Nemesis" and "These Are the Voyages".
Of course not, and I think that Bad Robot did a decent job with the last movie. And from what I saw in the trailes for the next one, it's gonna be spectacular.
I just don't agree with the common opinion on this board that nuTrek has to have as little connection to Star Trek as possible because they think that the general audience is too stupid to understand some references. And even if Joe Average doesn't get every reference, so what? I'm sure there are lots of references in other franchises that I don't get, but that doesn't spoil my enjoyment in any way.
Gaining a new audience is important and it helps the franchise to survive, but if we are going to reduce Star Trek to the lowest common denominator then it will become meaningless.
Just who was the Easter egg of tribbles on Delta Vega aimed at, anyway?
Do you really want it to just die and there be no more "Star Trek"? It looked pretty ragged after "Nemesis" and "These Are the Voyages".
Of course not, and I think that Bad Robot did a decent job with the last movie. And from what I saw in the trailes for the next one, it's gonna be spectacular.
I just don't agree with the common opinion on this board that nuTrek has to have as little connection to Star Trek as possible because they think that the general audience is too stupid to understand some references. And even if Joe Average doesn't get every reference, so what? I'm sure there are lots of references in other franchises that I don't get, but that doesn't spoil my enjoyment in any way.
Gaining a new audience is important and it helps the franchise to survive, but if we are going to reduce Star Trek to the lowest common denominator then it will become meaningless.
I'm glad that didn't happen, because it would have been fanwankingly stupid. None of the casual moviegoing audience would have known that it was Khan's ship (and if they did, they probably wouldn't have cared)
I don't see the problem there. None of the casual moviegoing audience knew who that guy in the final scene of The Avengers was, so what? By that logic you would have to drop all Star Trek references whatsoever and make it a standalone movie with no backstory at all. But that wouldn't be Star Trek, would it?
We always sit though the credits anyway so if they wanna tack some tidbit of a clue to the next one onto the end of STID I ain't going to complain. Usually we're the only ones left in the theater by credits end unless the general public knows there is something to see.
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