They already had the funeral. It was buried in a plot next to the N-word.
Proximity_Phaser said:
Trek died after TOS. Everything after has been an attempt to bring the corpse back to life.
The kids in my son's age group (6-8) are all Star Wars fans. My kid loves Trek just because we have TOS on DVD, but his peers have no idea what it's about. Star Wars kept going. Trek didn't, and the post TOS Trek, IMHO, didn't have the brash, unabashed goofiness and energy of TOS that appeals to kids.
Perhaps the new movie will click and give the old corpse enough jolt to galvinize it for awhile, or we might get a miracle and see it come back to life, but I'm not holding my breath. I wager that it will take itself too seriously.
If the public gets the impression that a brand doesn't stand for quality, they aren't going to buy it.
Temis the Vorta said:
If the public gets the impression that a brand doesn't stand for quality, they aren't going to buy it.
Right now, "Star Trek" means essentially nothing to most of the potential audience. To the extent it means anything, it means "something that used to be good about a million years ago, but nobody cares now."
PowderedToastMan said:
And the reason that CBS charge so much for DVDs is because the volume is not there like it is with other properties.
Proximity_Phaser said:
Indeed it has. The ability of the franchise owners to suck cash out of fans doesn't change my opinion that Trek without the TOS gang is a reanimated corpse.
I hope the movie brings it back to life, I really do. It's possible, but if it's just more post TOS franchise McTrek, then the yawnmeter gets pegged.
PowderedToastMan said:
it is true that trek is not dead, but it has moved to a lower tier. If you look at all the licensees it is obvious. Diamond Select and not Hasbro or Mattell, Bethesda and not EA or Activision, IDW and not DC or Marvel. And the reason that CBS charge so much for DVDs is because the volume is not there like it is with other properties.
Have you been into a toystore lately? look at all the superman, spiderman, and star wars toys...then try and find some trek. Star Trek is now a smaller niche market, skewed older.
Tactical Drone said:
I personally am sick and tired of everyone and everything being centered around "the general/mainstream" audience. Screw them. Make a movie for US, the fans and stop worrying about making mega-millions of dollars on this movie, cause you aren't gonna do it either way, so why not just focus on pleasing the real Star Trek audience?
Tactical Drone said:
I personally am sick and tired of everyone and everything being centered around "the general/mainstream" audience. Screw them. Make a movie for US, the fans and stop worrying about making mega-millions of dollars on this movie, cause you aren't gonna do it either way, so why not just focus on pleasing the real Star Trek audience?
RookieBatman said:
Tactical Drone said:
I personally am sick and tired of everyone and everything being centered around "the general/mainstream" audience. Screw them. Make a movie for US, the fans and stop worrying about making mega-millions of dollars on this movie, cause you aren't gonna do it either way, so why not just focus on pleasing the real Star Trek audience?
If that was their philosophy, the budget would be about $100,000 dollars for the whole thing, because they would know that they wouldn't make any money back otherwise.
You do realize that Paramount or any other movie company only ever makes any movie as a source of financial gain, right? They're not doing it for a general feeling of euphoria and the hope of karmic return.
Tactical Drone said:
I personally am sick and tired of everyone and everything being centered around "the general/mainstream" audience. Screw them. Make a movie for US, the fans and stop worrying about making mega-millions of dollars on this movie, cause you aren't gonna do it either way, so why not just focus on pleasing the real Star Trek audience?
CaptJimboJones said:
...and how he dug all the way back to a classic TOS episode as the movie's starting point, etc.
RookieBatman said:
Having not seen the movie, I'm curious. Which episode was that?
Tactical Drone said:
Make a movie for US, the fans and stop worrying about making mega-millions of dollars on this movie, cause you aren't gonna do it either way, so why not just focus on pleasing the real Star Trek audience?
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