A
Amaris
Guest
It does exist but its hardly been a huge success, it needs something big to make people get it. Yes they are missing the anniversary but only by a month and there could be a reason.Well I'm not sure we can say this is happening because the movies have been successful. I dont think it hurts but it could simply be they want to push their online service. Star Trek is one of their biggest properties and seems to be there go tofor this. They did it with Voyager for UPN, Phase 2 was meant to launch a network too.
It was inevitable they would do a series eventually, it just depended on when. Its also the 50th anniversary, good time to go for it.
Except that they've shown no interest in a ST tv show in years, this service they're 'launching' actually already exists now, and if this was supposed to be timed for the 50th anniversary, then their timing is terrible, because the actual show is going to miss that completely.
After Enterprise, Star Trek on tv was dead. It was inevitable that they would eventually try again, but without 2 successful movies and a 3rd (which they assume will be successful) set to hit this year, they almost certainly would not be there yet.
I guess we can agree to disagree on the movie part, I think if we hadn't had those movies at all, we could still be getting Star Trek now.
The movies made a half a billion dollars in the United States alone. They were both critical successes. There is a 3rd film being made as we speak, with names like Chris Pine, Zach Quinto, Karl Urban, Zoe Saldana, John Cho, Simon Pegg, and Idris Elba heading the cast.
Do you think without that, someone like Les Moonves would have said "Hey, I have a great idea! Let's use that franchise I canceled 10 years ago to become a major tentpole series for our streaming service! Surely the last iteration which failed as a critical series, and the last two movies which were financial bombs at the box office, will draw new viewers! Huzzah! Profit!"
No. The Abrams films put Star Trek back in the financial and pop culture crosshairs, and it may pay off big in the form of a television series.