You just couldn't name a starship U.S.S. Enterprise. That would be an infringing use. You can still name an aircraft carrier the U.S.S. Enterprise.
Episode VII. You heard it here first.
Nah, I'm kidding. I don't want those made till after Lucas is dead, anyway, or unless he's willing to give up creative control to someone else.
I would actually like to see more work done on A New Hope. Empire and Jedi hold up really well to this day (to the point that they generally look better than the video-game-esque prequels), but Star Wars kind of looks like crap. To those who disagree, I point to the scene where Han is all like, "I'm gonna have to do some spiffy maneuvering to get us out of this jam!", referring to the star destroyers behind him, then proceeds to fly in a straight line.
Don't laugh, because the terms "Starship Enterprise" and "U.S.S. Enterprise" are both trademarks of CBS...
Well that makes sense since it's not like the term U.S.S. Enterprise existed before Star Trek... It's not like there were ships called U.S.S. Enterprise before Star Trek...![]()
Nope, but it prevents another entertainment franchise--say, Stargate, for example--from having a fictional starship named Enterprise too and then calling dibs on it themselves.Don't laugh, because the terms "Starship Enterprise" and "U.S.S. Enterprise" are both trademarks of CBS...
CBS owns the term USS Enterprise? Does the US Navy have to pay royalties?
The announcement is that Lucas went into the prequel trilogy and replaced Hayden Christensen and Natalie Portman with Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart.
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