When they reboot STAR TREK again, then we can get a new Chekov.
Then reboot again ... now.
If it's about the actor over the character because of "special circumstance", start again.
With it all.
When they reboot STAR TREK again, then we can get a new Chekov.
Just thinking about it, after these TOS reboots run their course, which may be sooner than later with most of the cast only contracted for three films (as well as Anton Yelchin's untimely death), Paramount Pictures will have no where else to go with Star Trek on the big-screen.
Even though it'd be the cheaper option for Paramount (no licensing characters from CBS), I don't think we'll ever be seeing a new cast of characters being created for the big screen. One of the main draws of the reboot franchise is seeing the old characters revived in big-budget action/adventure spectacles. When the new actors eventually move on to other projects, will we be seeing a TNG reboot franchise?
Where should they go with them? Would the TNG crew work as well as the new TOS crew has? Would you like to see any DS9/VOY characters added to the mix?
TNG, I think, given the right choices, could have made it to the same heights in pop culture that TOS did, but after four middling films that didn't particularly honor the series well, and three successive series that had diminishing returns in ratings as time went on, I think TNG's legacy was muddled somewhat.
Then reboot again ... now.
If it's about the actor over the character because of "special circumstance", start again.
With it all.
to put a fresh face on the formula
This is the bottom line for the franchise, isn't it? Whether film, television, "streaming", or whatever form, making STAR TREK viable for future audiences is it.
I surmise some of us fans are concerned about its direction after we've left this mortal coil.
Personally, I don't want to see the TOS characters "rebooted" ever again.
Are general audiences so mindless that they will not go to a theater to see all-different characters in a different ship?
Must general audiences see only TOS characters on the big screen? Are they the only characters relevant to the franchise?
They must be the only money-makers in the whole franchise.
I suppose it is to Gene Roddenberry's credit that those original characters have the staying power ... but they can't be "evergreen", "actor-interchangeable".
Move on to the new. New, new, new!
In all honesty, film history disagrees with you.
Superman: Played by (so far) 6 (soon to be 7) different actors since the 1940ies when the first movie serials appeared.
Batman: Played by 7 different actors (8 if you count the 'Gotham' TV series since the 1940ies when the first movie serials appeared.
Flash Gordon: 4 actors since the 1930ies.
Buck Rogers: 4 actors since the 1930ies. (There was also a Buck Rogers TV series in the 1950ies aside from the 1979 "Buck Rogers in the 25th Century.)
My point? To this day if you ask the casual person about Star Trek; they'll more often respond with something related to Kirk, Spock, McCoy...et al; then any of the follow up series. The original series is still the iconic mold for 'Star Trek' - and over the next decades (and after we're gone); whenever they decide to revive/modernize 'Star Trek'; the original series themes and characters is what they'll use.
Except the success of the reboot films (and they HAVE been successful) shows that audiences will in fact accept different actors as these same characters; which was also my point regarding the various film incarnations of other iconic characters. It doesn't matter WHERE they started. All that matters to Hollywood is: Will putting these characters back on the screen with different actors bring in an audience and makes us money with a good return on investment?When people first read Superman, Tarzan, Buck Rogers, et al, they used their mind's eye to see the character as flesh and blood.
TOS started in television first; no mind's eye view was necessary; the actors were in the roles.
Now the converse happens; when I read a TOS novel or comic my mind's eye places those actors from the series in the roles as I read.
It was difficult to read the STAR TREK '09 novelization; I couldn't place the actors; my mind's eye kept going back to the TOS actors.
Does that make sense?
I think that by the time of TNG reality will have drifted so far from the original one that TNG won't happen at all, at least not the way we saw it. Remember that all it took was Picard NOT being stabbed in the back to change who would be the captain of the Enterprise. Here we have that multiplied by a million.
well yeah it's inevitable, the next ST movie that's already been greenlit is about a space conflict between captains picard and kirk that escalates until a bridge falls on them all. haven't you heard?
My point? To this day if you ask the casual person about Star Trek; they'll more often respond with something related to Kirk, Spock, McCoy...et al; then any of the follow up series. The original series is still the iconic mold for 'Star Trek' - and over the next decades (and after we're gone); whenever they decide to revive/modernize 'Star Trek'; the original series themes and characters is what they'll use.
When people first read Superman, Tarzan, Buck Rogers, et al, they used their mind's eye to see the character as flesh and blood.
TOS started in television first; no mind's eye view was necessary; the actors were in the roles.
Now the converse happens; when I read a TOS novel or comic my mind's eye places those actors from the series in the roles as I read.
It was difficult to read the STAR TREK '09 novelization; I couldn't place the actors; my mind's eye kept going back to the TOS actors.
Does that make sense?
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