The audience for Star Trek in 2009 was 60% male and 65% over 25.
They should have put more shirtless Kirk in the movie and trailers to get more females to see the movie.

The audience for Star Trek in 2009 was 60% male and 65% over 25.
Star Trek 3 in 2016.![]()
Star Trek 3 in 2016.![]()
I get the feeling that'll be precisely its name, too! I don't think the name "Star Trek into Darkness" worked nearly as well domestically as abroad, and I suspect the locals will be the focals going forward, with a repeat-style marketing campaign for the international numbers and possibly more Benedict than the team had initially plotted.
Meanwhile, in the name game, Paramount will wish to go back to basics more than ever before, hoping to leech off of Iron Man 3 proving you don't need an allegedly well-flowing title to grab people.
JJ Abrams settled on a formula for this franchise with the first film. Some of the elements included:
* the film would be an admixture of Star Wars and Star Trek
* science gets in the way of story, so minimize the science
* people relate to what looks real, so film in real world locations that can pass for locations on Earth and on board the Enterprise
* throw in some homages to Classic Trek to please the fans
The above is some of what I got from watching the documentaries included with the blu-ray release of the first film. Watch them yourself. They are very informative.
Paramount created focus groups overseas in an effort at determining what will work and what will not work. So, this film is partially a focus group driven movie.
Personally, I think that a pure Star Trek film is dead. The people who matter the most - the overseas audience - aren't interested in Star Trek. They want action-adventure stories that they can understand. Think about that for a moment. Consider how many different cultures a film has to be made for, and what this does with the freedom of writers to craft and write a story. If there is a third film, I believe that it will be even further removed from Trek than the current film.
From what I am reading, many fans are happy with this film. I think this same group will be happy with the next film. For those of us in the minority, I am concerned about alienation and ostracism. I am seeing those who like this film being hypercritical of those who disagree. They are labeling those who disagree as "extreme fans", as "whiners", and other ugly epithets. This is a classic tactic by the majority to marginalize those who have differing opinions.
* the film would be an admixture of Star Wars and Star Trek
* science gets in the way of story, so minimize the science
Personally, I think that a pure Star Trek film is dead.
Paramount vice chairman Rob Moore said he is extremely pleased with the result, particularly overseas, where he says Into Darkness could ultimately double the $127 million earned by the 2009 film. And in North America, he believes word of mouth will be strong, based on the film's A CinemaScore and favorable reviews (the sequel has an 86 percent rating on Rotten Tomatoes, a good score for a commercial tentpole).
The audience for Star Trek in 2009 was 60% male and 65% over 25.
Just posted by Paramount. Read between the lines if you wish.
Paramount vice chairman Rob Moore said he is extremely pleased with the result, particularly overseas, where he says Into Darkness could ultimately double the $127 million earned by the 2009 film. And in North America, he believes word of mouth will be strong, based on the film's A CinemaScore and favorable reviews (the sequel has an 86 percent rating on Rotten Tomatoes, a good score for a commercial tentpole).
Just posted by Paramount. Read between the lines if you wish.
Paramount vice chairman Rob Moore said he is extremely pleased with the result, particularly overseas, where he says Into Darkness could ultimately double the $127 million earned by the 2009 film. And in North America, he believes word of mouth will be strong, based on the film's A CinemaScore and favorable reviews (the sequel has an 86 percent rating on Rotten Tomatoes, a good score for a commercial tentpole).
...I suspect the locals will be the focals going forward...
On the bright side, it's already made more dinero than Nemesis did in its entire run![]()
Actually it has made as much as STFC did when accounting for inflation....in just over a WEEK!
RAMA
First Contact made US$146m.
As it stands ST:ID has only made US$67.2m thus far.
Nemesis made US$67.3m.
So in straight figures it hasn't beaten either of those films yet. True the Sunday figures for the US+Canda and the first full week for the rest of the world (where it was relased on May 9)have yet to come in which should easily push it past First Contact figures.
...I suspect the locals will be the focals going forward...
No. That's not the lesson of this release.
Edit: The Numbers already has STID listed at $84,091,000 domestic $164,591,000 Worldwide. The Intl numbers were revised from $75 million to $80.5 million.
So despite the panic, STID probably will do $5 million more domestically in fewer theaters, for 5 days.
http://www.the-numbers.com/movies/franchise/Star-Trek
RAMA
Edit: The Numbers already has STID listed at $84,091,000 domestic $164,591,000 Worldwide. The Intl numbers were revised from $75 million to $80.5 million.
So despite the panic, STID probably will do $5 million more domestically in fewer theaters, for 5 days.
http://www.the-numbers.com/movies/franchise/Star-Trek
RAMA
Fewer theaters? Why? Probably because of IM3 and GG...?
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