Again, trying to pigeonhole Star Trek into the space epic category is just another indicator of a lack of imagination.
It only needs to be a space epic in the movies, and that's because the movies demand a strong action focus of any summer blockbuster, not because
Star Trek demands it. It's simply how the movie business has gone. No sense fighting it. The alternative is to make
Star Trek as a little arthouse film, and nobody's interested in making that.
The broader canvas of stories needs to be told on TV (cable, not broadcast). Movies have become far less interesting than TV anyway.
You should be able to get a read on Terra Nova's fate fairly quickly after it debuts (Sept 26). It's absurdly expensive, so FOX must be expecting stratospheric ratings. We'll probably know whether the experiment was a success by early November.
Terra Nova is going to fail. Just my prediction. The premise just seems so... "been there, done that."
Hasn't been done on TV. What they're testing is the concept of whether applying a huge budget to bring movie-style eye candy to TV will attract a huge enough viewership to justify the budget. It's an attempt to see if broadcast TV can be saved as viewers flee to cable.
The alternate idea - drive the budget way down so that smaller audiences don't hurt you - has been tested by NBC by their
Jay Leno 5x week experiment. That flopped, so maybe the opposite will work?
At the very least, it's good that someone is testing this idea. Broadcast needs to try all the avenues to see if their business model can even be salvaged. If
Terra Nova flops, that may signal the end of free broadcast TV altogether. In the future, everything will be on smaller channels that get 5-10M viewers and you have to subscribe to get anything. Free TV may still exist but it will be all reality TV and infomercials.
Personally I think the experiment will fail and prove that free broadcast TV is doomed but we shall see.
I personally fail to see little difference in seeing blue poeple on the big screen than that of seeing them on the small screen.
The difference is in the business model. Getting millions of people worldwide to PAY to see blue people on a big screen works much better than getting a few million to watch it for free, and "pay" only as much as their eyeballs are worth to advertisers. TV simply makes far less money per audience member than movies, and therefore movies get far bigger budgets. It's an open question whether TV is capable of funding the budgets for blue people who don't look like crap or other eye candy elements.
One of the most brilliant aliens, and one of the most alien, is the Horta.
I would love to see a remake of The Devil in the Dark that had the resources to make the rock monster seem completely believable, and terrifying when it melts red shirts. And of course with the tweaks to address its shortcomings, like "you stand over here by yourself for a few hours and be sure not to fire at any monster approaching you".
I don't think that's out of the question at all.
Falling Skies has a similar, very alien-looking type alien, in the skitters (used sparingly to save on budget). It got 6-7M on TNT, which made it the biggest scripted cable hit of the summer. That same number would be cancellation city on CBS, which is just more proof that we need to forget about
Star Trek on broadcast. And we can forget about Nav'i on cable, because they're too pricey, but Hortas and skitters might be do-able.
People don't want to believe in anything unreal anymore,
Supernatural horror and fairy tales are doing great on TV - that is, on the CW and cable (broadcast is once again trotting out a new batch of fantasy shows but it remains to be see if they're any more successful than the last batch.
But here's the catch: supernatural horror and fairy tales appeal to the female audience that now dominates TV viewing. Males have fled to the internet and video games. So is there any point in making shows for them anymore? The advertisers might push you to try, but if they keep playing their video games, screw it, your ratings will be so low that you get cancelled. Why not just remake
Beauty and the Beast for the female demo instead? Who needs all that aggravation?