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Stewart on Picard/Logan

Khan 2.0

Commodore
Commodore
Stewart’s reluctance to revisit Star Trek may be surprising to some fans, especially given his large role in another major franchise, Marvel’s X-Men. His Professor Charles Xavier appeared in seven live-action X-Men films. 2017’s Logan was a powerful sendoff for the character, and the ending stayed with Stewart as he considered his potential return to Star Trek.

“I asked to meet them all again and at the second meeting, I had specific terms and conditions that I said would allow me to think about reviving this world. Much of it was about what the world would be that you were going back to,” Stewart said, before referencing another franchise he had starred in. “I referenced X-Men and particularly the final movie that Hugh Jackman and myself did, Logan, as [to] what I had in mind. Logan was nothing like any of the other X-Men movies that had come before. It was very, very different. The world had changed. And so, I challenged Alex Kurtzman and Akiva Goldsman to come up with ideas for a completely different world than the one that we had known 17 or 18 years earlier.”

https://intl.startrek.com/news/patrick-stewart-talks-x-mens-influence-on-his-return-to-picard

I guess you can look at TNG as Xmens 1-3/DOFP... then Picard = Logan
 
It's a funny thing. All of the promotional material has me incredibly excited for this show. I've also felt buoyed by recent comments from a TV/film critic I trust, Allison Shoemaker, who said essentially, "I can't tell you why, but I have some very good reasons to think Picard is going to be great. Trust me, this is going to be really good." I am thrilled about Chabon. But the one thing that has given me pause is...Stewart.

I love Picard, and I absolutely adore the man behind the character. But it's no secret that some of the later, less popular parts of the movies were in part a product of Stewart and Spiner's dictates. That does give me pause. Or it has given. Interviews like these are leading me to think that Stewart is no longer interested in action hero, gets-the-girl Picard and is more interested in exploring aging, loss, regret, and change. Things that Picard wears well (or at least the version of Picard I have a particular fondness for; others may, of course, enjoy those parts of him that I have not). So, I guess this is a long way of saying that I'm starting to have faith that Stewart's choices and my interests might just line up here, and that we're going to get a story that does justice to the character without being beholden to, or precious about, the past. I like what he says about Logan and about moving the world forward. It's interesting to think that he had so much to say about the world. I'm very curious to learn what that means.
 
I've never seen Logan. The only three X-Men movies I've seen are the first two, when I was in college, and X-Men: First Class in 2011. That's it. I'll have to watch Logan so I know what everyone's talking about and so it doesn't all go straight over my head.

Most of my X-Men knowledge comes from the cartoon in the early-'90s and from friends of mine who were obsessed with X-Men when I was growing up, always telling me about what was going on while I kind of just nodded my head. DC was more my thing than Marvel.
 
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I've never seen Logan. The only three X-Men movies I've seen are the first two, when I was in college, and X-Men: First Class in 2011. That's it. I'll have to watch Logan so I know what everyone's talking about and so it doesn't all go straight over my head.

Most of my X-Men knowledge comes from the cartoon in the early-'90s and from friends of mine who were obsessed with X-Men when I was growing up, always telling me about what was going on while I kind of just nodded my head. DC was more my thing than Marvel.

Logan is quite sentimental, but man its plot requires characters to do very stupid things that get people killed unnecessarily. I consider it to be overpraised.
 
Logan was amazing. I imagine this references the wholesome Starfleet of TNG now being somehow complicit in mass producing a slave race of Soong-type androids and concentration camps inside deactivated Borg Cubes.
 
I absolutely loved Logan, it was depressing but it was a logical conclusion to what we had seen so far in the X-Men movies, it always felt like the mutants were fighting a losing battle. But I don't want that to be retread with Star Trek, thematically it doesn't really make sense.
 
I found Logan just ok, not bad but also not good.
I hope that Picard is going to be the oppsite of what Xavier was in Logan
 
If your interested on Youtube they've posted the Comicon Paris Picard Panel from Paris on Youtube. Patrick Stewart has alot of interesting to say about his Journey in the new series along with the other cast members.
 
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