I'm thinking real.
Broccoli said:
I think people are looking waaaaay too much into this trailer. It's just a trailer. Probably, none of that will actually be seen in the movie. Lots of movies do that. Just to get the audience to go "ooh". Other recent examples that I can think of is "Transformers" and "Ratatouille".
The teaser for "First Contact" had a giant Trek logo appear in space with the Borg Cube flying through it. Is that canon? *
The idea of building the Enterprise was probably to send an idea out there that the story will be "the beginning" of Star Trek (in this case Kirk and Co first adventure).
* (the answer is yes)
Kpnuts said:
I think people are over-playing this whole 'Under Construction' thing. As far as I'm concerned it's just a way of saying 'coming soon' but using the imagery in the trailer. Nothing more than that.
steveman said:
You guys...
All clowning aside, I voted for real. I guess the whole sticking point for choosing one way or the other falls upon how you feel about the tools the workers are using. There are some who feel the tools that they're using seem quite antiquated, and therefore signal to the fact that they, the workers, are metaphorical.
On the other hand, there are those who are in the "If ain't broke, don't fix it" category and can accept that workers in the future might use some of the same construction techniques that we use today.
Count me in the "If ain't broke, don't fix it" category; I can accept the workers using construction techniques that are, seemingly, antiquated for a future time period such as the one we are witnessing. Again, "If ain't broke, don't fix it"... and, of course, the tools being used might have some sort of futuristic tech intigrated into them that we can't see.
Ultimately, I think the whole "Under Construction" tagline is served well simply by the fact that workers are working on the Enterprise. Their task is evident. I don't think the workers necessarily need to be from the past in order for that point to hit home, even if sound bytes from the past are used in the trailer.
the pie wins.RoJoHen said:
I could go for some pie.
Holytomato said:
"Does anyone else out there get a Blade Runner type feel to the murk and gloom in the trailer, as if an alternate universe was being portrayed rather than the bright and shiny UFP centerpiece that earth usually appears to be in trek?"
Translation: "Oh, my, god! It's dark! Blade Runner! Blade Runner! Blade Runner! Blade Runner! :sob: ""
Star Trek has done dark before:
Star Trek The Motion Picture
Star Trek II The Wrath of Khan
Star Trek III The Search for Spock
Star Trek IV The Voyage Home
Star Trek V The Final Frontier
Star Trek VI The Undiscovered Country
Star Trek VII Generations
Star Trek VIII First Contact
Star Trek IX Insurrection
Star Trek X Nemesis
Star Trek Deep Space Nine
This along with: "Oh, my, god, They are using C G I :sob: "
leads me to believe some still can't get over the fact that its not 1966 or 1979 anymore.
Its 2008.
Besides, the Star Trek XI Enterprise design is what Roddenberry & Co wanted the Enterprise to look like since 1964.
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