God, enough of this!!
If you can't contribute something new AND relevant to this thread, take a breather and stay out!!
Totally Agree,
my initial post was days ago and it was others that dragged it up, and I have every right to reply.
God, enough of this!!
If you can't contribute something new AND relevant to this thread, take a breather and stay out!!
Does anybody remember when we used to be explorers?
forgive my ignorance here, but when axanar is finished will it be online or straight to dvd or what ?
The proof is in the final product.
I'm cautiously optimistic, but fan productions are a mixed bag, in my opinion.
If what they produce matches the quality of Prelude I'll be more than satisfied. (Of course the actual production will face different challenges from a mockumentary format like Prelude, but it left me pretty confident in the chops of the team. The latest taste likewise.)
NO, you did NOT say it was better than "anything Abrams has done in trek that I saw", you said, specifically, that it was "better than anything Abrams has ever done".Really? A twenty-minute fan film with not much plot to speak of is better than "Regarding Henry", "Alias", "Lost", "Fringe", "Person of Interest", "Cloverfield", "Super 8"...?I am so looking forward to this.
The prelude to axanar was better than anything abrams has ever done
I dont think I have looked forward to any film in my entire life so much.
I will make this easier for you so you might eventually grasp it.
Are you sitting down ?
I am looking forward to Axanar, the movie, I liked the prequel ...I loved it, and expect the movie to be as good.
Still with me ?
It was in my opinion better than anything Abrams has done in trek that I saw.
I cannot comment on a list of programmes I have not seen, so you will have to make do with my opinion on what I like.
I do hope that makes it easier for you to comprehend, and I hope I have not hurt your feelings or offended you with me having the audacity of having my own opinion.
What it comes down to is largely target audience. A mainstream popcorn flick is going to be aimed at the broadest mainstream audience. To that end they're going to boil it down to the barest elements to make it as accessible as possible. Going beyond those parameters is going into riskier territory. That isn't to say that a film aimed at as broad an audience as possible can't be entertaining (from which we get into debates about what different people find entertaining), but you're certainly not going to please everyone.
A fan production is more in line with going for a focused audience. The producers know who their audience is and the project is tailored that way. And because they're not concerned about box office sales and killer opening weekends they can focus on making something they know the target audience wants to see.
Something like Axanar could work as a studio backed feature film, but as an original non Trek project. It would never be green lighted as a Trek project because there are too many unknowns in it--it's not familiar enough for a mainstream audience. But as an original idea about space war--that's something that could conceivably work with a mainstream audience given we're talking about something thats a variation of Star Wars, but more smartly done.
A fan production (like an Indie film) has the freedom to indulge in ideas that a major studio wouldn't have the nerve to do. But something like Axanar could give someone the idea to mount a similar project, but as something outside of Trek. Indeed there are decades worth of SF novels that deal with essentially this very idea: space war between major interstellar powers.
In fact I'm pretty sure I heard not long ago that Joe Haldeman's The Forever War was supposedly in development as a feature film. Ender's Game was about space war.
NO, you did NOT say it was better than "anything Abrams has done in trek that I saw", you said, specifically, that it was "better than anything Abrams has ever done".
You do understand that your ACTUAL words are right there on screen, right?![]()
forgive my ignorance here, but when axanar is finished will it be online or straight to dvd or what ?
Online streaming only, unless a person has donated to receive a physical Blu-ray disc (either the standard SE or the super-ultra-mega pack) which will never be available at stores. We can't, due to CBS and that whole no profit thing. =)
The proof is in the final product.
I'm cautiously optimistic, but fan productions are a mixed bag, in my opinion.
If what they produce matches the quality of Prelude I'll be more than satisfied. (Of course the actual production will face different challenges from a mockumentary format like Prelude, but it left me pretty confident in the chops of the team. The latest taste likewise.)
I liked Prelude and found the concept to be interesting. My only struggle (and the reason why I watch films) is there were maybe two characters that I liked and wanted to see succeed or (in contrast) see fail.
VFX only does so much as far as my interest goes, so I am hoping for a trailer where I have a more concrete idea of what everybody's role is in the actual film.
Again, cautious optimism, but I've seen many fan productions over the years, and I think caution on my part is warranted. This is not a slam against the production team, who I think are doing a good job, especially with a lot of naysaying and random attacks.
I am looking forward to the trailers, as well.
This one is for Terry:
It's a minor quibble, but could you guys cut back on the FB posts a little bit? I'm having to go in 3 times a day and clean out excess posts so that the things I want most to show up on my Timeline don't get overwhelmed. Axanar isn't the only culprit, but it's one of the bigger ones. I really don't want to have to "unfollow", but it's just getting to be too much. A large part of it is when you spread stuff that other people have posted to your pages.
Thank you for being open to suggestions/questions.
Mr. McIntosh,
Quick question, have you spoken to Abrams and Co at all? I'm very interested to see if we'll see any influence on either end. I especially love the fact that the JJ-fleet is actually here (though I'm a bit miffed you didn't use the window viewscreens!).
I respectfully disagree with your premise. "Mainstream" does not have to = "big, loud, stupid, and over-sexed". Star Trek did fine on big screen and small for almost 2 decades without compromising what it was at its core.
This one is for Terry:
It's a minor quibble, but could you guys cut back on the FB posts a little bit? I'm having to go in 3 times a day and clean out excess posts so that the things I want most to show up on my Timeline don't get overwhelmed. Axanar isn't the only culprit, but it's one of the bigger ones. I really don't want to have to "unfollow", but it's just getting to be too much. A large part of it is when you spread stuff that other people have posted to your pages.
Thank you for being open to suggestions/questions.
I'm sorry, but that's been discussed ad nauseam in house and the answer is going to be no. Blame Facebook. Once they revamped their system a good year ago now, where, unless you not only 'like' but specifically tick 'get notification' on their interface, people only see the popular stuff from pages that they like. So, in order to get more exposure, our PR pro folks are adamant that we need to hammer the message a bit with more routine postings.
So, anyone that would like to see less, and that's a very small percentage that have vocalized such a concern to us, would need to use the controls on their own Facebook accounts to slow them down on their end.
I wish that we had a better option, and if Facebook showed our posts to everyone that wanted to see them without complex methods or popularity, like it used to be, then we'd likely only post important things or at least once a day.
BOOOO to Facebook. =(
I don't think we're in that much disagreement. I think we've said rather similar things but in different ways.What it comes down to is largely target audience. A mainstream popcorn flick is going to be aimed at the broadest mainstream audience. To that end they're going to boil it down to the barest elements to make it as accessible as possible. Going beyond those parameters is going into riskier territory. That isn't to say that a film aimed at as broad an audience as possible can't be entertaining (from which we get into debates about what different people find entertaining), but you're certainly not going to please everyone.
A fan production is more in line with going for a focused audience. The producers know who their audience is and the project is tailored that way. And because they're not concerned about box office sales and killer opening weekends they can focus on making something they know the target audience wants to see.
Something like Axanar could work as a studio backed feature film, but as an original non Trek project. It would never be green lighted as a Trek project because there are too many unknowns in it--it's not familiar enough for a mainstream audience. But as an original idea about space war--that's something that could conceivably work with a mainstream audience given we're talking about something thats a variation of Star Wars, but more smartly done.
A fan production (like an Indie film) has the freedom to indulge in ideas that a major studio wouldn't have the nerve to do. But something like Axanar could give someone the idea to mount a similar project, but as something outside of Trek. Indeed there are decades worth of SF novels that deal with essentially this very idea: space war between major interstellar powers.
In fact I'm pretty sure I heard not long ago that Joe Haldeman's The Forever War was supposedly in development as a feature film. Ender's Game was about space war.
I respectfully disagree with your premise. "Mainstream" does not have to = "big, loud, stupid, and over-sexed". Star Trek did fine on big screen and small for almost 2 decades without compromising what it was at its core.
You state that BH won't "risk" money on a Trek that is respectful to its fanbase and history. While that may be to some extent true, it is not because that is the wrong way to go, but because BH has become so risk-averse and blockbuster-oriented that it has put itself in position of requiring itself to act that way.
Step the budgets back down to the $100 million range, go with a generation or so less sophisticated CG and FX and (most importantly) tell stories with intelligence, that engage the audience beyond the visceral, and do so with passion and integrity.
Audiences will respond to quality if they're given a chance to do so. Star Wars was dismissed as "fluff" and deemed "too risky" and look where Lucas' passion, integrity, and quality took him.
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