Sounds like you might like The Orville. There's no need to watch multiple TV shows that you don't enjoy.
Here's the analysis of how it did.We're mainly on the same page, but...
If $709 million dollars is underperforming, Sony may have had unrealistic expectations to begin with. As a sequel, it only did $50 million dollars less than the first movie.
He got Star Trek after being co-writer and co-executive producer of the hugely successful 2009 and 2013 Trek movies.Sony had to get into that Disney partnership because The Amazing Spider-Man 2, co-written and co-produced by Kurtzman, underperformed. Before that, Disney had nothing to do with the Spider-Man films.
Universal had huge plans for the Dark Universe, with stars lined up for their movies in their own "cinematic universe". It died with the first movie, which was co-written, co-produced and directed by Alex Kurtzman.
So yes, two huge franchises in a row. He trashed them, walked away and got "Star Trek".
It started with JJ Trek. JJ Abrams made a Star Wars movie and called it Star Trek. Abrams was admittedly never a Star Trek fan. He fundamentally misunderstood the franchise. The film happened to make a lot of money because it has Star Trek in the title.
Neither Discovery nor Picard are grimdark. Warhammer 40000 is by definition grimdark, and nothing in Star Trek even comes close to its relentless hopelessness.the same grimdark
I don't think Kurtzman's the main problem with current Trek TV. I think the problem is how both series so far have gone for the same grimdark, violent tone as damn near every other US genre show right now. It's depressing so much apparent creative talent didn't have the imagination or the courage to try something different, especially with Trek.
I'm not yearning for rehashes of TOS or TNG, but it feels to me like that optimistic spirit has been suffocated. I believe it was noted in the build-up to Discovery that more graphic stuff would only feature where truly necessary, but I have to wonder why it was even necessary in the first place, and why the current Trek writers seem so unable to write stories that don't require it. Whatever happened to restraint, subtlety, nuance? Or do viewers now only respond if the gore's shoved in their faces?
I don't expect any future shows beyond the reported Nick one - be they Section 31, or Pike, or Academy, or anything else - to break that mould, which would be a shame. Not exactly much to attract the, excuse the pun, next generation of young Trekkies, is there? Not exactly much true variety, either. Trek feels like it's taking the easy route right now, the one they know is most likely to sell in the era of grimdark, and Kurtzman definitely has to take some responsibility in that.
Star Trek has lasted over fifty years, I believe, because it's been so different from other franchises. To make it "change with the times" is to lose something important at the heart of Star Trek.
As for restraint, lots of writers on the show hated the Roddenberry Box but Michael Pillar loved it. Restraint can breed creativity. That's why they went through so many writers during TNG until you get left with a team that knows how to write Star Trek.
Star Trek has lasted over fifty years, I believe, because it's been so different from other franchises. To make it "change with the times" is to lose something important at the heart of Star Trek.
Why oh why did they have to make Discovery a prequel? The show runners tacitly admitted that the first two seasons didn't matter by swearing everyone to secrecy and sending the ship into the future. Why should the audience care about these characters if the people in charge don't seem to?I think Star Trek can both adapt and change without losing the qualities that have made it endure for so long.
While I don't think Star Trek should discard it's episodic roots entirely, serialized storytelling on Star Trek is fine by me so long as it is well-written and compelling, like Mad Men or Justified.
I would love to see a serialized Star Trek that explored new worlds and had a wild west feel to it.
There's a balance to be had, because in order to keep going you have to give modern audiences something that they are looking for. "Optimism" doesn't represent a huge selling point right now.
Though the "fall of the Federation" storyline is getting a bit tedious already with two seasons of Discovery being about stopping it from being overran and Picard showing us things fraying.
I'm strangely ok with this. It's silly to expect Star Trek to go on forever.
There's nothing wrong with serialization but give us a break every now and then.
his work on trek is very inferior to the best we have ever seen of trek.
Also why are the new trek shows making some of their female characters act like Cassie Cage from Mortal Kombat? I guess this is kurtzman way of making trek look cool.
The first picard episode and the two action scenes that is very transformerish does not help.
when you watch Picard and discovery you can tell its the same writer that wrote transformers, cowboys and aliens, spiderman 2, the mummy and everything he has ever done.
its a pattern, its how you can tell a Tarentino movie or a Nolan movie. Kurtzman is the same. as I said the proof lies in the generic story telling of picard and all the superficial action set pieces.
I think you should give them something that they didn't know they wanted, like an optimistic future.
Why not? Let the audience rest every now and then. It's tiring to just keep beating up the audience with world ending threats and things like that.
Hollywood is risk-averse. People like to see things fall apart, so that is the shoe Star Trek now wears.
Why not? Let the audience rest every now and then. It's tiring to just keep beating up the audience with world ending threats and things like that.
Sad.
I won't say that Kurtzman is without flaws, but I think he is actually well positioned right now for the franchise. Yes, he's ambitiously pursuing the whole thing with multiple concurrent series and several media platforms, etc. On the other hand, he's not directly involved in the writing; he's turning over the direction of each series to people with interesting talents, some from the past, some new literary people; he cares that everything looks in a manner that can compete with other science fiction productions (so what if it's the same shuttle craft). I like that he is involved in Star Trek as a whole, while those under him are focused on the specific products.Is Alex the best man/woman to run Star Trek.. Nope! Do i have an alternative.. Nope
Kurtzman doesn’t have enough hours in the day to do his actual job, much less all the extra stuff alleged in this thread. For a fan base that once prided itself for its intelligence...
I see this asked a lot, and here is the answer: Because Bryan Fuller wanted it to be. CBS wanted to be in the Bryan Fuller business, thinking Fuller was a buzzy name they could attach to Star Trek, and that's the story Fuller wanted to tell. He wanted to tell a story set in that era. Frankly, his earliest pitches were for an anthology series with a season being from each era, but that's what they settled on. Fuller wanted it that way, and had a story he wanted to tell there. Everyone else has been playing the cards Fuller dealt before leaving the production.Why oh why did they have to make Discovery a prequel?
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