Kieran said:
Considering the no name actors and piss-poor, rehashed storyline, Trek XI is a probable disaster akin to the failure that was Nemsamess.
So... what will Paramount do when this film utterly fails?
Personally, I hope the film does well because if it doesn't, it might spell the death of Trek for a decade... but considering the storyline, things look very, very bad for the franchise.
Considering the "no-name actors"... I'M ECSTATIC! I don't need Paris Hilton playing Yoeman Rand and what's-his-name, the "punked" guy who hangs out with Bruce Willis's ex, playing Kirk.
I want GOOD ACTORS who can play the roles, not "today's hot thang."
The fact that you seem so obsessed about "big name actors" simply tells me that you have no idea what actually makes for a quality film.
And let's be honest here... we know INTERNET RUMORS about the storyline. Just a few weeks ago it was "confirmed" that the Guardian of Forever was central to the movie. Now we know it's not.
What you THINK you know may not be accurate. Bear that in mind. Is the storyline really as "piss poor and rehashed" as you think it is? Maybe... maybe not. Unless you've READ THE FREAKIN' SCRIPT, you have no way of knowing. Do you?
Is this film going to be fantastic? Is it going to reek to high Heaven? Do we have ANY INFORMATION WHATSOEVER that tells us which, if either, will be the case?
NO.
So go take a prozac and chill out. The first we'll really know about the quality of the film will be early next fall, when the first rough-cut screenings take place. Someone who sees that will leak it, and then we'll have a hint of what sort of movie it's going to turn out to be.
It could stink. But I think you're a WEEEEEEEE bit premature to be concluding that already. Don'cha think?
Now, to your point... if it DOES stink... if it tanks at the box office... Trek will be in the same situation it was in during the early 1970s. Official publishing will grind to a halt. No new films or series will be in production. If it survives, it will be kept alive due to fan involvement, without being "led by the nose" by Paramount.
I'm not sure that's such a bad thing. The "renaissance" of Star Trek was back when the series had picked up just a bit... two movies (TMP and TWOK) and fandom's involvement was at its height (including published works far superior to anything PPC's marketing division ever put out!).
So if this tanks... it'll be forgotten, except as a "bad dream" experience. And in another decade or so, someone will come back and decide to try reviving "the property" once again. Whether that revival is a "reimagining" or an "expansion" will depend on just how vigorous the fan activity is during that hiatus period.