Nah,Alex Kurtzman needing to mark his territory.
Nah,Alex Kurtzman needing to mark his territory.
I kinda-sorta think he did that with the Multi-Million-Dollar-Five-Year Contract and his own Personal Office Bathroom on the CBS lot.Alex Kurtzman needing to mark his territory.
I'm betting Data will only be seen in flash backs and as a hologram. It's B-4 we see in the drawer, likely due to not being stable enough to lead a normal life. Romulus being destroyed is prime timeline and it's destruction is the reason we have the Abrams movies..as mentioned above.
If three movies and key part of the next Trek series is "all for nothing" I'm genuinely curious what kind of impact something needs to have in order to have worth.But with the 2009 movies stalled, it seems like it was all for nothing anyway- for BOTH timelines
CBS owns the the rights those movies too. Paramount made them under license from CBS.I mean the owners of the movies, Paramount, from their 2009 point of view.
Nah,
Nope.Alex Kurtzman needing to mark his territory.
How is it "for nothing" if Picard is picking up the storyline and exploring the consequences? How is getting two movies in which we explore Spock's personal struggles with the destruction of Vulcan "for nothing?"But with the 2009 movies stalled, it seems like it was all for nothing anyway- for BOTH timelines. Vulcan was destroyed in one timeline for a series that prematurely ended, and Romulus, a very important planet and culture in Trek was destroyed for the same reason.
If three movies and key part of the next Trek series is "all for nothing" I'm genuinely curious what kind of impact something needs to have in order to have worth.
Nope.
How is it "for nothing" if Picard is picking up the storyline and exploring the consequences? How is getting two movies in which we explore Spock's personal struggles with the destruction of Vulcan "for nothing?"
The Kelvin movies are not big epic political thrillers. They are deeply personal stories around intergalactic events. So, I struggle, genuinely, with the idea that it was "for nothing" when we got so much character and story moments out of these moments, and potentially more with Picard.
Given the ambivalence towards Kelvin Trek (even ten years later) I don't think it would much matter to any fans if it continued. I personally think they did well with Spock even in the short time that it was done, and the whole situation was well done. And the destruction is still something that hits me hard, both Vulcan and Romulus. Because of how Spock and Nero react.That's the big problem--is whether fans are as vested in Vulcan's destruction and Spock's struggles as the movie itself. I have noticed that some fans at least say that they didn't have much of an reaction to it, so it wouldn't surprise me if they felt the same about Romulus's destruction too.
That's the difference for me. I think it was there in Into Darkness going forward.Because the Kelvin movies stalled out at 3 -- we never really get to see Spock struggle with the loss Vulcan. Not in the way that the series was rushed. The character growth should have been really getting underway by the third movie and instead it's stopped abruptly.
Given the ambivalence towards Kelvin Trek (even ten years later) I don't think it would much matter to any fans if it continued. I personally think they did well with Spock even in the short time that it was done, and the whole situation was well done.
Then I think the "a lot of fans" missed the point of Spock's struggle in ID.Another problem is the perception for a lot of fans is that the extent of Spock struggling was the adventure with Khan in ITD, and then Spock talking about resigning to help establish a new colony for Vulcans in Beyond. And that's it, the franchise is over. (or may be over) Everything felt rushed.
Which is more appropriate for a TV series than a film series. And they did explore that in the comic series, so I don't think they missed the opportunities, so much as recognized what stories they wanted to tell in what medium.There was so much that could have been done in the movie series - to see more Vulcans, see their plight, how they react, Pon far, all of that-- but to that, they had to slow down, ease up on the action, and not rush or skip over events.
I have a feeling the studios intended to do a lot more films in the Kelvin series--at least up to 7, possibly more, but rushing everything the way it did, kind of sabotaged the series imo.
Completely agree.To this day, I think they should've come out every two years.
I have the opposite feeling about "rushing", though. I think the NuTrek movies took too long to come out. Four years is too long of a wait for a "new" film series. Especially one that's intended to skew young. Four years is a long time for a young person. It's the difference between being a freshman in high school and being a freshman in college. To this day, I think they should've come out every two years.
]I don't know about 7, but definitely more than 3.
No, in this case I mean rushing events within the films itself. Particularly making Kirk captain of the Enterprise at the end of the 2009 movie. And the other cadets into seniors officers.
By Beyond, Kirk is applying for admiral and it's implied out of boredom, and it's only been 3 years.
And the Enterprise was destroyed. We were barely getting used to it. So from that point of view it really seems like they were rushing things.
The destruction of Vulcan had a massive impact on Spock throughout the trilogy. In the second movie he had survivors guilt and was willing to die in a volcano and in the third he wanted to take Old Spock's place rebuilding Vulcan (again, after Old Spock talked him out of it at the end of '09) after he died.Because the Kelvin movies stalled out at 3 -- we never really get to see Spock struggle with the loss Vulcan. Not in the way that the series was rushed. The character growth should have been really getting underway by the third movie and instead it's stopped abruptly.
Not boredom. Kirk questioning his place in the universe after the chaotic events of the first two movies. It's pretty much spelled out "My dad joined Starfleet because he believed in it. I joined on a dare."By Beyond, Kirk is applying for admiral and it's implied out of boredom, and it's only been 3 years.
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