well the wrath of kahn was only good star trek movie so they trying to draw power from that
I'm sure one reason why they're using Khan (assuming that's correct which it probably is) is that it'll be a challenge creatively to reuse that character without rehashing Space Seed and TWoK and come up with a different spin on the character.
I'm sure one reason why they're using Khan (assuming that's correct which it probably is) is that it'll be a challenge creatively to reuse that character without rehashing Space Seed and TWoK and come up with a different spin on the character.
Respectively, I don't think ANY filmmaker ever chose a previously used character for the reason that it will be a creative challenge. The decision to use Khan was done because someone with the power to finance - either Abrams, or Paramount execs, or someone - decided they can make more money easier by using Khan. They felt the potential rewards out weighed the risks included in using a previously established - and very popular/powerful - character.
If they wanted a creative challenge, they would have CREATEd a new character.
I'm sure one reason why they're using Khan (assuming that's correct which it probably is) is that it'll be a challenge creatively to reuse that character without rehashing Space Seed and TWoK and come up with a different spin on the character.
Respectively, I don't think ANY filmmaker ever chose a previously used character for the reason that it will be a creative challenge. The decision to use Khan was done because someone with the power to finance - either Abrams, or Paramount execs, or someone - decided they can make more money easier by using Khan. They felt the potential rewards out weighed the risks included in using a previously established - and very popular/powerful - character.
If they wanted a creative challenge, they would have CREATEd a new character.
Using Khan creatively will be (or was, since shooting's over) as big or bigger a challenge than creating a new character. And, I doubt very much the leading force to use him would've been commercial interests or pressures from outside the creative team. It certainly helps a bit that Khan has some name recognition, but that won't bring in extra dollars at the box office if the story sucks. In fact, it could hurt. In that way, using Khan is actually taking a big chance. They better have a damn good reason for it. As is a great story.
And as far as Khan's name recognition goes, one wonders how much cache that really holds any more among movie goers who weren't really Trek fans but enjoyed TWOK in 1983. Hell, they're all old like me, now, and may not even really recall Khan except in the vaguest terms (as in "Oh, yeah, that was the movie where Dr. Spock [sic] died. Didn't Khan fire him out of a torpedo tube or something?")
Respectively, I don't think ANY filmmaker ever chose a previously used character for the reason that it will be a creative challenge. The decision to use Khan was done because someone with the power to finance - either Abrams, or Paramount execs, or someone - decided they can make more money easier by using Khan. They felt the potential rewards out weighed the risks included in using a previously established - and very popular/powerful - character.
If they wanted a creative challenge, they would have CREATEd a new character.
Using Khan creatively will be (or was, since shooting's over) as big or bigger a challenge than creating a new character. And, I doubt very much the leading force to use him would've been commercial interests or pressures from outside the creative team. It certainly helps a bit that Khan has some name recognition, but that won't bring in extra dollars at the box office if the story sucks. In fact, it could hurt. In that way, using Khan is actually taking a big chance. They better have a damn good reason for it. As is a great story.
And as far as Khan's name recognition goes, one wonders how much cache that really holds any more among movie goers who weren't really Trek fans but enjoyed TWOK in 1983. Hell, they're all old like me, now, and may not even really recall Khan except in the vaguest terms (as in "Oh, yeah, that was the movie where Dr. Spock [sic] died. Didn't Khan fire him out of a torpedo tube or something?")
OF COURSE it was for financial reasons. It's the same reason Hollywood is currently only making sequels and franchise pictures - name brand recognition, it is believed, is less of a financial risk than a completely new story or set of characters. When you're pouring 200 million dollars into a picture, you want to make damn sure, if you can, that you get butts in the seats. Using well-known names is an attempt to do just that.
And you're wrong, Franklin, if you think a bad story or a bad movie will mean a financial failure. Name recognition alone can almost guarantee a financial success (please see Transformers II and III for relevant examples.)
You're also under-estimating the brand recognition of the name "Khan." It's almost as popular as the name "Kirk" or "Spock." They even made fun of it in Seinfeld, knowing full well the majority of the Seinfeld audience would get the reference.
The reason they are using Khan (if they are) is the same reason they chose to recast the original crew - money. There is nothing, absolutely nothing, about this entire rebooted franshise that suggests to me that the filmmakers are interested in doing anything new with these movies. What they are clearly trying to do is recreate the success of the old, recapture what used to work about Star Trek. They are risking very, very little.
I would much rather they spent less money on the movie, making it less of a financial risk, and actually tried to take the franchise in a new direction, somewhere it has never been before.
It wouldn't be so horrible if the last two movies hadn't already tried to copy Khan and totally failed at it.Let me start by saying that I liked Star Trek 09. I want to like this next one. But with all the ideas of what to do with a new Trek film, Khan was all they could come up with? There's really only been 11 Trek films, and they feel the need to reuse the villain from one of these again? I really, really hope this will be an outstanding film, and I'll love it, but I'm dissapointed if this rumor is true. Anyone else share these feelings?
^^^And that includes not knowing anything about Khan, so what's the point?
And that includes not knowing anything about Khan, so what's the point?
I think the problem is rather that they tried to much to explain why things are different now inside of the story.Even though this is an alternate time line, it's supposed to have been the same up 'till the Narada came through, yadda, yadda, yadda.
^I'm sure one reason why they're using Khan (assuming that's correct which it probably is) is that it'll be a challenge creatively to reuse that character without rehashing Space Seed and TWoK and come up with a different spin on the character.
Respectively, I don't think ANY filmmaker ever chose a previously used character for the reason that it will be a creative challenge. The decision to use Khan was done because someone with the power to finance - either Abrams, or Paramount execs, or someone - decided they can make more money easier by using Khan. They felt the potential rewards out weighed the risks included in using a previously established - and very popular/powerful - character.
If they wanted a creative challenge, they would have CREATEd a new character.
I think the problem is rather that they tried to much to explain why things are different now inside of the story.Even though this is an alternate time line, it's supposed to have been the same up 'till the Narada came through, yadda, yadda, yadda.
Imagine that there had been no Nimoy and no 'bad guy messes with the timeline' story, just a clean and simple reboot. Nero is just a random bad guy and Kirk becomes friend with Spock without having met the other Spock. No inside jokes and familiar Trek aliens galore and this movie would actually have ended the continuity obsession of the franchise instead of intensified it.
Call me skeptical, but even in the unlikely event that someone had been able to persuade the franchise owners and filmmakers that a complete break from the older continuity and full restart in a new one was the best way to proceed, I strongly doubt that anything short of the end of the Universe (and thus existence as we know it) would be likely to put an end to continuity arguments among the Trek community-at-large, no matter how many familiar and comfy aliens were included....
No inside jokes and familiar Trek aliens galore and this movie would actually have ended the continuity obsession of the franchise instead of intensified it.
Call me skeptical, but even in the unlikely event that someone had been able to persuade the franchise owners and filmmakers that a complete break from the older continuity and full restart in a new one was the best way to proceed, I strongly doubt that anything short of the end of the Universe (and thus existence as we know it) would be likely to put an end to continuity arguments among the Trek community-at-large, no matter how many familiar and comfy aliens were included....
No inside jokes and familiar Trek aliens galore and this movie would actually have ended the continuity obsession of the franchise instead of intensified it.
I don't see it as any different to Batman fighting The Joker again and again. Khan is Kirk's "greatest nemesis ever", and now 30+ years later we get to see them go at it again, in a NEW story (it's NOT a remake of Wrath of Khan or Space Seed, any more than The Dark Knight remade 1989's Batman) with modern SFX and a $150 million budget.
That's my take. It may suck, it may rock (hoping for the latter!). But bringing back classic villains in new scenarios isn't a problem for me.
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