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JJ's Trek - The critics - and STID

Transformers IMO isn't a fair analogy
..
Also, Trek isn't as popular with people under 18 as Transformers is.

Transformers is a perfect analogy. You have two preexisting franchises penned by the same writers, both appealing to lowest-common-denominator demographics. Trek used to be known as having an aging nerd demo, but because of the "reimagining" it's now hip to the same people who like Transformers, people who don't care about reviews or plot-holes.
 
Transformers IMO isn't a fair analogy
..
Also, Trek isn't as popular with people under 18 as Transformers is.

Transformers is a perfect analogy. You have two preexisting franchises penned by the same writers, both appealing to lowest-common-denominator demographics. Trek used to be known as having an aging nerd demo, but because of the "reimagining" it's now hip to the same people who like Transformers, people who don't care about reviews or plot-holes.

I'm sorry, but I'm going to call B.S. on this unless you provide some real demographic data to back it up. What is a "lowest common denominator demographic," anyway? How do I know it when I see someone who fits that description?

I would also refer you to this link. It's not a purely random representative sample of Trek fans (if that could ever be obtained), but it's well done, and the results are interesting nonetheless:
http://trekmovie.com/2006/09/24/the-myth-of-the-star-trek-fan/
 
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What is a "lowest common denominator demographic," anyway? How do I know it when I see someone who fits that description?

You just ask them.
If they enjoy a movie you dislike then they are part of the lowest common denominator demographic.
 
What is a "lowest common denominator demographic," anyway? How do I know it when I see someone who fits that description?

You just ask them.
If they enjoy a movie you dislike then they are part of the lowest common denominator demographic.

This. If they're people you think are inferior because they dare to have opinions different from you, that is the lowest common denominator.
 
You know, I sometimes shudder to think what today's internet critics would do to the fun old science fiction and fantasy movies I grew up on, like The Creature from the Black Lagoon or One Million Years B.C.

"Ohmigod, how stupid does Hollywood think we are? Everyone knows that cavewomen and dinosaurs didn't co-exist! And what's with all the fur bikinis? Talk about pandering to the lowest common denominator!"

Yes, yes, I know. Star Trek should be held to a higher standard than an old drive-in monster movie. But, at the risk of voicing my inner curmudgeon, I do sometimes pine for the good old days when we didn't take this stuff quite so seriously . . . or fret endlessly about whether it's "intellectual" enough.
 
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You mean, like, last week? ;)

Don't fret--the number of people who take stuff like this too seriously is far, far outweighed by those who see it for what it is--entertainment.
 
What is a "lowest common denominator demographic," anyway? How do I know it when I see someone who fits that description?

You just ask them.
If they enjoy a movie you dislike then they are part of the lowest common denominator demographic.

This. If they're people you think are inferior because they dare to have opinions different from you, that is the lowest common denominator.
Nice avatar!
 
I do think reviews and word-of-mouth have an impact. Where I live, it takes a real effort to get out to the movies, so if some movie I was interested in gets universally bad-to-lukewarm reviews, I'm much more likely to decide, "Screw it. I'll wait for the DVD" . . . and maybe never even get around to that.

Heck, Spider-Man 3 has been sitting on my DVR for months now, and I've never been motivated enough to check it out, just because nobody seems very enthusastic about it . . .

That's almost exactly how I saw Star Trek 2009 - I waited till it was on a film channel, but that was my own apathy to the whole project rather than reviews. Still the only released Trek film I don't own a copy of.

Whereas I took a day off work to go see Transformers Dark Of The Moon and Resident Evil Retribution.

The fact STID is in 3D might convince me to see it on the big screen, but the trailer does little to help the cause. It looks a good film, it just doesn't look like a Star Trek film.
 
The film will be pretty repetitive, based on the trailers. More of the same, same structure, very similar set pieces, just more expensive.
 
I think a lot of people, fans and non-fans alike, that enjoyed the last one will check this new movie out. If the critical reviews are positive and if word of mouth is strong then this one will also be a big success.
 
What is a "lowest common denominator demographic," anyway? How do I know it when I see someone who fits that description?

In medieval times, storefronts used to avoid words and use pictures to describe what they were selling because the public was so illiterate. That's kind of where we are now with movies because they have to not only be mainstream for US audiences--they have to be able to resonate for international ones as well.

Therefore everything waters itself down to "good guys" and "bad guys", so the dialogue (which is going to be subtitled or dubbed) won't matter and any localized cultural references will be few and far between.

This is how Hollywood today operates.

And you also have to think about the thought process that goes into deciding whether or not to plunk your money down for a ticket. Why is it that these CG kids movies are so popular, for instance? Over the weekend I will probably offer to take my daughter to see The Croods. I've already gotten wind of lackluster reviews of it. Why would I do that? Because I need to take her out and do something special since it's been a long time. The money I plunk down is not a validation of the movie. It's because the movies are a sociological phenomenon. We've got a 3D flat-screen at home now. We don't specifically need to go to the movies at all. But we go to "go to the movies". And that's what LCD is. The minimum entertainment experience people will want when they "go to the movies" is spectacle. And that's what Transformers, ST, Marvel comic book movies, that's what they all do.

Back before home-video and all the other competition for people's attention arrived, movies were a more dominant medium that covered a more complete spectrum of topics. And that includes sci-fi. Compare Prometheus to Alien, for instance. Alien was a rather intimate horror movie compared to the epicness of Prometheus. The difference in tone reflects the different role that movies play in people's entertainment now vs. then. Audiences demand to be bludgeoned by shock and awe. If they want something more cerebral they will watch an HBO drama.
 
In medieval times, storefronts used to avoid words and use pictures to describe what they were selling because the public was so illiterate. That's kind of where we are now with movies because they have to not only be mainstream for US audiences--they have to be able to resonate for international ones as well.

Therefore everything waters itself down to "good guys" and "bad guys", so the dialogue (which is going to be subtitled or dubbed) won't matter and any localized cultural references will be few and far between.

This is how Hollywood today operates.

Paul Thomas Anderson doesn't seem to have noticed. Someone ought to tell him.

Back before home-video and all the other competition for people's attention arrived, movies were a more dominant medium that covered a more complete spectrum of topics.
Hollywood's always been primarily genre-driven. The difference, aside from short term influences like the economic circumstances of the last 4 or so years, has been that marketing departments have been more readily able to identify niche markets. So niche market films are marketed to their respective niches. Other films, mainstream or tent-pole fare, are aggressively marketed everywhere. And sure, they're tailored to satisfy a 'lowest common denominator' audience. They always have been. Hollywood studios didn't gradually transform from noble, art-for-art's-sake intellectuals to base purveyors of watered-down pabulum. They've always been purveyors of watered-down pabulum.

There was a period from some time in the late '60s to some time in the early '80s where the culture of the primary market was undergoing rapid changes and it wasn't clear what kind of movies it would best respond to. Some small number of younger people were able to prove with unexpected successes that they knew better than the studios what would and wouldn't succeed. And so you got the much-vaunted time of the Hollywood auteur, many of the films made by whom are unwatchable today, their other successes notwithstanding.

All that's happened since then is that marketing techniques have improved.

And that includes sci-fi. Compare Prometheus to Alien, for instance. Alien was a rather intimate horror movie compared to the epicness of Prometheus. The difference in tone reflects the different role that movies play in people's entertainment now vs. then.
Alien was a half-formed idea greenlit with a minimal budget solely because of the success of Star Wars, which underwent numerous rewrites by studio executives (Ash being an android is probably the biggest such change).

All too often when examining the past, we commit a form of the Texas Sharpshooter fallacy. It was thus, and so it was intended to be thus, and there were numerous justifying reasons behind its having been thus. When in fact most often these are primarily accidents of circumstance.

Audiences demand to be bludgeoned by shock and awe. If they want something more cerebral they will watch an HBO drama.
kMwoC7H.png


HBO dramas aren't replacing something that movies have stopped giving us. They're an entirely new phenomenon giving us something movies have never been able to. The analogy I like to draw is that of short stories versus a novel.
 
In medieval times, storefronts used to avoid words and use pictures to describe what they were selling because the public was so illiterate. That's kind of where we are now with movies because they have to not only be mainstream for US audiences--they have to be able to resonate for international ones as well.

Therefore everything waters itself down to "good guys" and "bad guys", so the dialogue (which is going to be subtitled or dubbed) won't matter and any localized cultural references will be few and far between.

This is how Hollywood today operates.

Paul Thomas Anderson doesn't seem to have noticed. Someone ought to tell him.

Back before home-video and all the other competition for people's attention arrived, movies were a more dominant medium that covered a more complete spectrum of topics.
Hollywood's always been primarily genre-driven. The difference, aside from short term influences like the economic circumstances of the last 4 or so years, has been that marketing departments have been more readily able to identify niche markets. So niche market films are marketed to their respective niches. Other films, mainstream or tent-pole fare, are aggressively marketed everywhere. And sure, they're tailored to satisfy a 'lowest common denominator' audience. They always have been. Hollywood studios didn't gradually transform from noble, art-for-art's-sake intellectuals to base purveyors of watered-down pabulum. They've always been purveyors of watered-down pabulum.

There was a period from some time in the late '60s to some time in the early '80s where the culture of the primary market was undergoing rapid changes and it wasn't clear what kind of movies it would best respond to. Some small number of younger people were able to prove with unexpected successes that they knew better than the studios what would and wouldn't succeed. And so you got the much-vaunted time of the Hollywood auteur, many of the films made by whom are unwatchable today, their other successes notwithstanding.

All that's happened since then is that marketing techniques have improved.

And that includes sci-fi. Compare Prometheus to Alien, for instance. Alien was a rather intimate horror movie compared to the epicness of Prometheus. The difference in tone reflects the different role that movies play in people's entertainment now vs. then.
Alien was a half-formed idea greenlit with a minimal budget solely because of the success of Star Wars, which underwent numerous rewrites by studio executives (Ash being an android is probably the biggest such change).

All too often when examining the past, we commit a form of the Texas Sharpshooter fallacy. It was thus, and so it was intended to be thus, and there were numerous justifying reasons behind its having been thus. When in fact most often these are primarily accidents of circumstance.

Audiences demand to be bludgeoned by shock and awe. If they want something more cerebral they will watch an HBO drama.
kMwoC7H.png


HBO dramas aren't replacing something that movies have stopped giving us. They're an entirely new phenomenon giving us something movies have never been able to. The analogy I like to draw is that of short stories versus a novel.
Well said. :techman:
 
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