It's bad enough that the novel character is just not the one we knew and loved on the screen, but then they decide to kill her off because this "un-Janeway" was hard to write. Whose fault is that?
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There are obviously several ways to answer this.
1) Its our fault, the fans. By not devouring everything Voyager the minute it was dropped onto our plate, (Voyager Launch books, Voyager relaunch books, etc.) we have suggested that we do not care for our Captain and her crew.
Our standoffishness may have been due to displeasure with the quality of story writing/ obvious unfamiliarity with our crew ...
(I didn't buy the 3rd Voy launch book years ago after sitting through 2 novels where the central point of trauma was watching poor Icheb wither without his regeneration chamber in a Starfleet prison while a Starfleet officer fashioned herself into a new BORG Queen. Of course, the mere fact that he's had
NO NEED to regenerate since he gave his cortical node to Seven in the
2nd ep of the 7th season wasn't the only source of my displeasure, but I digress)
... the "LAUNCH story itself also created an immediate boredom in the fans. Afterall they had just finished
THE BORG QUEEN as a threat to the Alpha Quadrant. Why did we need to see a
"BORG Queenlet" as the central story in the new Alpha Quadrant version of Voyager?
2) Its TPTB's fault.
Trektoday's article about the new movies has made me laugh. See the following ...
“I can tell you as we go into it, that our aspirations are for the movie to be even bigger and better than the first one,” Star Trek XII producer Bryan Burk this week told TrekMovie.com . “I don’t mean that just in scope, I mean content and characters and emotionally. We had a lot of conversations about Batman Begins and how that movie kind of re-invented that franchise, and we looked at what The Dark Knight did and how that really ramped it up and they went to a different place with that film, and how those two films keep re-inventing themselves and are not the same thing every time. So we have strong ideas of what we want to do and we are hoping that this one is an even bigger film than the last one.”
Burk explained that making the film bigger does not just mean throwing extra money at the production, but that it would also affect the kind of story the film will be telling: “I feel like, particular with the last film, we brought a lot of people into the Star Trek universe who either hadn’t been there before or hadn’t been there in a while, and now that you know who these characters are, we are hoping to take grander and bigger steps with the characters, emotionally. The stakes will be bigger and people will be more invested.”
Hmm.
Damn, they are so freaking smart.
Isn't that what we've been asking for, these
last 9 years.
I, along with many Voy fans, were invested emotionally in our little band of Voyagers. That was one of the prime reasons so many hate Endgame. Sure, our people get home... BUT WHAT HAPPENED NEXT? Did Mom and Dad accept them back into their home? Did They adjust to the change? Did they have to face a court trial and be acquitted (Maquis for being Maquis, Janeway for being Janeway?) Sure, TPTB felt they answered those questions by showing the alt timeline Voyagers "future"... but that was different. I doubt Harry's parents were still alive when he got home after 23 years, and the same goes for Janeway and Paris.
If TPTB wanted to attract new people to the franchise, they needed to think less like Star Trek and more like Sci-fi. I wouldn't hold BATMAN BEGINS up... I would hold up
BATTLESTAR GALACTICA as the role model for reinventing a genre.
They should tell
great stories that allow people to fall in and out of love and in and out of like as needs be.
They would learn that having an
ADMIRAL around can be a GOOD thing (Yes I think
WilliamAdamRulz! ). The could have told stories about
ships (which is the straight jacket from which most
Trek suffers ) and stories about
Deep Space Stations, StarFleet Academies, and the
Starfleet Admirality. They could have allowed
our crew to populate Starfleet
in all these platforms and wound the "Voyager" stories throughout all these venues.
BSG SPOILERS!
One of the things I loved about BSG was that Roslyn was
President of the civilian govt and her domain was
Colonial One. The Commander, and later
Admiral Adama was King of his domain, and primarily was found on
Galactica. They had to "go" to one another to let their friendship, and later their love develop. It wasn't by accident that she finally told him "I love you" on neutral ground... the Cylon Baseship.
That is something I could see for "my" auburn haired Admiral... whether it was with my preferred consort, or some other.
Voyager didn't need to "be" reinvented... it just needed to "be"
unleashed from the rules of Trek writing.
Want to bring in "new" fans to scifi/to Trek? Give them something they've never seen before.... or at least nothing they've never seen before in
Trekdom.
A Captain/Admiral that isn't "just" wedded to his/her ship.