I don't know why B&B would have needed to make any sort of "statement" about Romulans in movies.
- Make a bad movie.
- Make the bad movie longer.
- ?
- Profit!
The open question is would the full-length movie have been bad.
- Make a bad movie.
- Make the bad movie longer.
- ?
- Profit!
The open question is would the full-length movie have been bad.
There's not a film made that could lose 33% of itself to time cuts and not come out the worse for it. Keeping in the extensive character development would only have strengthened the film by improving it's through line.
Must have been an interview about ENT as Braga was not involved with NEM. Berman, Logan and Spiner are to blame (and Stewart for his constant demands for more sex&action for his character) for this mess of a script which is, as you pointed out, not about Romulans. If it had actually been about Romulans, if it had taken the numerous Romulan stories from TNG as a benchmark, it would most likely have been a superior movie.The ironic thing is that after Nemesis bombed, Berman & Braga made a statement something to the effect of "I guess the fans didn't want to see a movie about Romulans." Which was not only untrue (since Nemesis wasn't actually about Romulans), but was not even close to the real reason why the movie bombed. Although to their credit, I'm sure they really felt that way and weren't just making up some BS as an excuse, just like I truly believe B&B meant well when making TATV. But it also showed just how out of touch they were about Trek and the fanbase at the time.
This wasn't likely the only reason the movie was cut down for time. Movie theaters generally frown upon films being more than two hours. The reason is very simple: the shorter the film = the more times they can show it = the more money they can make in ticket and concession sales.
This wasn't likely the only reason the movie was cut down for time. Movie theaters generally frown upon films being more than two hours. The reason is very simple: the shorter the film = the more times they can show it = the more money they can make in ticket and concession sales.
Which is why most of these movie exhibitor companies are crap, and are not as half as good as the theaters that are independently run and owned, IMHO.
^I'm sorry, but having to cut a movie just to make sure that they can maximize profit is short-sighted and foolish...
I have a list of movies to recut, and here is my entry for NEM:But yeah, by 2002 the public was sick of Trek, as represented by an overabundance of drab, apparently interchangeable series on TV, and the shittiness of INS in terms of story, humour and visuals. At that point, commercial failure was inevitable - arguably.-Dune buggy scene: replace first shot of Picard et al in buggy with one from later, with Picard looking less enthused. Recut to reduce general 'fun factor'.
-Mind rape: use deleted elevator scene instead, as much toward the end of the film as possible (when Shinzon's hostility is overt).
-Remove Riker/viceroy fight, just intercut shipboard battle when a beat is necessary.
-Showdown: foreshadow spikes. Maybe grab a shot from elsewhere of Picard quickly looking off-camera to insert before he grabs the spike. Push in on Shinzon as he pulls himself along spike, add squishy noises.
-Use subtle slow-mo and push-ins to heighten Data's emotion rescuing Picard and killing self.
-?Remove wake scene, replace with Worf/Spot deleted scene.
-Remove animated window view from final Picard/B4 scene.
.
I'm of the same opinion--I know the casting of Nemesis seems prescient now since Tom Hardy has become that much more famous, but Patrick Stewart as Shinzon would've made the "Evil Picard" aspect of Shinzon considerably more effective.I've said it before, but the one thing that would have transformed this film for me would have been if Patrick Stewart played the role of Shinzon.
Franchise fatigue is something studio's/networks say when they continually put out a garbage product and people finally stop buying it.
Franchise fatigue is something studio's/networks say when they continually put out a garbage product and people finally stop buying it.
Problem being, you can only put out so much material before it all starts looking much the same and your audience leaves.
I think the quality between the various series and movies is marginal, at best. If Enterprise had debuted in 1987, it would've been a hit in the same vein as TNG. If TNG had debuted in 2001, after 600 episodes and 9 movies had been produced, the reaction would've been tepid.
I think franchise fatigue is very real and something Disney may run into when oversaturating the market with super hero movies and TV shows over the next half decade.
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