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Trek XI to be alternate timeline, according to AICN

For THIS movie, obviously, its the trekkies who are gonna be asked whether the Trek movies is worth the movie ticket. If they tell their buddies that it was stupid or boring or something, the friends are probably going to skip it.

You place way to much importance on Trek fans, not everyone knows one. WE AS A GROUP AREN'T IMPORTANT!

People wouldn't be interested in a Wars movie that even Warsies hate.

Funny the Star Wars prequels tell me otherwise...

The syllogism: Trek fans won't see/or might hate this movie therefore joe schmoe won't care for it doesn't hold up. If anything the inverse is more realistic...

The same thing with Abrams supposedly approaching them about a Trek movie -- we don't really know for sure. Both parties have a vested interest in making it appear that Abrams is a Trekkie dreaming of making a Trek movie. What were you expecting them to say?

According to everything Trekmovie.com has reported we do know this. This wasn't some preexisting script being shopped around for a director but orgninated with the director himself. PowderedToastman could better confirm this I'm sure.

it's waaay more complicated

Maybe for you... its clear however by other movies with like premises not for everyone else...

You can't gauge the "complications" without viewing either the script or better still the movie itself. Since it all comes down to how the script addresses them.

Sharr
 
I don't like it.

It makes my head hurt. And if it makes my head hurt, it means that it won't be accessible to the masses.

What's the point of ditching the tangled continuity of the past if you are going to replace it with a convoluted time-travel story that will imply to the audience that they are missing pieces if they haven't seen all that has come before?

The only way that this is going to work is if all of the fall-out from these universe-altering-events is implied and is not in any way part of the actual drama.

If it's something that allows for fanboy speculation (like the ret-con nonsense of Picard leaving a big chunk of Borg ship on Earth), then I'm okay with it. (It's dumb, but I'm okay with it.)

But if the audience is expected to in any way follow the past timeline, the current timeline, the future timeline, and/or any other timelines or alternate versions of timelines... forget it. Too complicated. Too much of a headache.

Let's have a fucking simple romp through space. Is that too much to ask for?

And Nimoy has continually downplayed the significance of his part. This seems to conflict with that.

But we'll see.
 
And Nimoy has continually downplayed the significance of his part.

News to me, if anything he tends to state he likes it because it is significant and crucial to the movie.

Sharr
 
Sharr Khan said:
And Nimoy has continually downplayed the significance of his part.

News to me, if anything he tends to state he likes it because it is significant and crucial to the movie.

Sharr

Whenever I have heard him speak about it, he has downplayed his part, as if to say "Don't expect too much! I'm only in a small part of it."
 
Samuel T. Cogley said:
Sharr Khan said:
And Nimoy has continually downplayed the significance of his part.

News to me, if anything he tends to state he likes it because it is significant and crucial to the movie.

Sharr

Whenever I have heard him speak about it, he has downplayed his part, as if to say "Don't expect too much! I'm only in a small part of it."

I've gotten the exact opposite impression myself. Whatever part he has seems critical and important and couldn't be filled by anyone but himself as "Spock" unlike say Generations.

Sharr
 
Sharr Khan said:
Samuel T. Cogley said:
Sharr Khan said:
And Nimoy has continually downplayed the significance of his part.

News to me, if anything he tends to state he likes it because it is significant and crucial to the movie.

Sharr

Whenever I have heard him speak about it, he has downplayed his part, as if to say "Don't expect too much! I'm only in a small part of it."

I've gotten the exact opposite impression myself. Whatever part he has seems critical and important and couldn't be filled by anyone but himself as "Spock" unlike say Generations.

Sharr

I'm not saying that he implied that "anyone else" could fill his part, but his cryptic comments implied -- to me, anyway -- that his screentime will be short and his role will not be hugely important to the story.
 
I personally get the impression that his role will be bigger than the one he turned down in Generations, which he characterised as too small and not essentially Spock.

In size, probably around Kirk's in the same movie, possibly a little less or more, certainly pivotal in some way. Quinto's Spock definately more important overall, though. My educated guess.
 
UWC Defiance said:
Very few people are going to ask trekkies whether or not they should see a movie - "Star Trek" or otherwise.

Funny, 'cause that's what happens with most other movies. You ask people who generally like the subject and have seen the movie whether the movie is any good.

It usually goes something like this:

Scifi fan: "I saw Pebble in the Sky over the weekend".

Buddy: "Was it any good?"

It happens all the frickin' time. Either someone mentions they saw a movie over the weekend, or a friend who knows that you like a certain type of movie will say:

"I'm thinking of seeing Hairspray, have you heard anything about it?"

It's word of mouth. If each trekkie has 5 friends, and they ask, then that trekkie has the influence of 6 people (himself and the 5 others he gives his opinion to). Marketing is all well and good, but all the marketing in the world can't erase the influence of your friends.

So there will be an influence. I don't think trekkies by themselves can make a flop, but they can tip the scales a bit. What I'd watch for is the second or third week numbers. If they're down from the first weekend, then the mob has spoken.
 
Funny, 'cause that's what happens with most other movies.


Word of mouth such as it is, is usually more general then what you are making it to be. (General) Movie goers won't be seeking out their local Trekkie (or even coming to forums like this - short of accidentally Googling it) for opinions about if they should see this film or not - unless chance happens they already know a Trekkie.

Otherwise and for the most part it will be the trailer/Abrams name attached to it/and the marketing effort/reviews... ect as the primary drive selling the film.

Sharr
 
BalthierTheGreat said:
Funny, 'cause that's what happens with most other movies. You ask people who generally like the subject and have seen the movie whether the movie is any good.

Nope, that's not what happens with most other movies.

People generally ask their friends who like the same kinds of things they like. Most people don't give a whoop whether the other fellow is some kind of afficianado of the subject matter or not.

Most people don't ask people who read comic books whether the new "Spider-Man" or "Superman" movie is any good. Most people didn't ask fans of the old "Transformers" cartoons whether the "Transformers" movie was any good.

They just listen to what other people who'd seen the movie - including reviewers - have to say about it.

Only trekkies consider the opinions of trekkies about a "Star Trek" movie to have any special importance.

People wouldn't be interested in a Wars movie that even Warsies hate.

No one gives a crap what "Warsies" think of the "Star Wars" movies except for "Warsies."
 
Sharr Khan said:
I'd like to see these offical small numbers you are on about. The ones who are buying the books, DVDs, watching the repeats and who will be going to see this film. Where'd you get your stats from? and what is considered Die hard?

Anyone who posts at this board would be a die hard, and if Fandom was so vast Enterprise would be on the air.
Then you must think that the fans will watch any old shit that has Star Trek written on it. And now you are telling me that fans would be responsible for keeping a TV show on the air if they watched it but wouldn't be responsible for the success of a film.

They're not making this movie to please the fans. Trust me the amount of "fans" is far to small to sustain Trek as a franchise.
They've done pretty well so far.

- they're looking to make a new generation. Better to honk off the dwindling numbers and move on...
Or honk off the rest of the fanbase and end the franchise.

There wouldn't a Star Trek movie to argue about without Abrams. The movie doesn't exist regardless of Abrams but because of him. If he happened to not be at Paramount we'd be waiting a long long time for anything labeled "Star Trek" to come to be...
Now that's complete and utter bullshit. Paramount weren't waiting for Abrams to come along to breath life into the franchise. There are many talented people out there who could do Star Trek. You think they are going to hold off on making a few Hundred Million on a new Movie because Abrams isn't around? Give me a break. :lol:

Actually the writer was only described as a "Trekkie" no hardcore attached.
Well what the heck do you think Trekkie means?

And the Spock Travelling back in Time movie concept isn't the first time we have heard this. AICN reported something similar a few years back with Old Spock going back in time to the 21st Century this time. So I won't give Abrams all the credit for this idea.

UWC Defiance said:
Only trekkies consider the opinions of trekkies about a "Star Trek" movie to have any special importance.
If there is a new Star Trek series or movie out I get asked by none fans if it's worth watching or not.

Anyone else get asked also? Stand up and be counted.
 
Now that's complete and utter bullshit. Paramount weren't waiting for Abrams to come along to breath life into the franchise. There are many talented people out there who could do Star Trek. You think they are going to hold off on making a few Hundred Million on a new Movie because Abrams isn't around? Give me a break

Nope, it would have sat docile for a few years at best. Nemesis and Enterprise pretty much did it in. A Trek movie is being made because it was Abrams chosen project and part of his condition for working at Paramount. At least according to my understanding of anything I've read at Trekmovie.com about the issue.

This is actually the only movie where to my memory it started out with the director pushing it rather then a studio placing a team together to work on a script they've bought. This process actually strikes me as not typical of how movies get made.

They've done pretty well so far.

Not really the falling off ratings disagree.

Then you must think that the fans will watch any old shit that has Star Trek written on it. And now you are telling me that fans would be responsible for keeping a TV show on the air if they watched it but wouldn't be responsible for the success of a film.

No I'm telling you that's why the fans are not the focus group they are shooting at here there weren't enough to keep a show on the air nor are there enough to make a bit of difference as to the success of this movie. The goal is to make *new fans* not please the small amount of current ones. Really Paramount shouldn't be acting to please us at all.

Or honk off the rest of the fanbase and end the franchise.

No.

Well what the heck do you think Trekkie means?

I took the "die hard" attachment to mean more then a fan. A Trekkie need not also be a die hard fan - I consider myself a Trekkie yet would call myself die hard.

And the Spock Travelling back in Time movie concept isn't the first time we have heard this. AICN reported something similar a few years back with Old Spock going back in time to the 21st Century this time. So I won't give Abrams all the credit for this idea.

First I heard of it. And if that's so perhaps none of these rumors are true at all...

If there is a new Star Trek series or movie out I get asked by none fans if it's worth watching or not.

Anyone else get asked also? Stand up and be counted.

Not a good measure since it falls on under "they happen to know a Trek fan" not everyone does. Certainly most movie goers do not seek out genre specific fans for their opinions be it scifi or mystery or horror.

No one's ever asked my opinion about Star Trek and I'd be amazed if they bothered to.

Sharr
 
UWC Defiance said:
Anyone who asks a hardcore trekkie their opinion on a Trek movie...will probably only do it once. Life's too short. :lol:

Sooo....What's your opinion of TMP?
 
Sharr Khan said:
I took the "die hard" attachment to mean more then a fan. A Trekkie need not also be a die hard fan - I consider myself a Trekkie yet would call myself die hard.

I agree. I'm very knowledgable about Star Trek but I don't have the stamina or the personality to be "die hard". Even most of what I know about Trek comes from when I was in junior high or high school. These days my opinion of Star Trek movies, IRL as of 2007, amounts to:

TMP -- "Great music and special effects but, just to warn you ahead of time, the story is a bit thin and it moves at a slow pace."

TWOK -- "Check it out."

TSFS -- "Good movie but it can't stand on its own. Middle Of A Trilogy Syndrome."

TVH -- "That's the one where they go back to the 1980's."

TFF -- "Not too many people like it, I do."

TUC -- "Worth taking a look."

GEN -- "Skip it and watch First Contact instead."

FC -- "It's a popcorn movie but check it out."

INS -- "Eh. Watch First Contact instead."

NEM -- "Watch First Contact instead."

ST -- "I'm actually looking forward to this one." or (to a pre-existing fan) "I'm actually looking forward to this one, the fact that Leonard Nimoy is involved is a good sign."

That in a nutshell is the Real Me if I were recommending Star Trek movies. These days I'd either recommend other stuff or, if it were a space program, I'd recommend Battlestar Galactica.

The show I was really into for a while was HBO's prison drama Oz. That show fell into two categories when I tried to get people into it: either they were hooked right away or even making it through just the first episode was too much for them.

Getting back to Trek, I think "die hard" is a heavier shade than "hardcore". I'd split it up as:

Viewer
Fan
Hardcore Fan
Die Hard Fan
"Jury Duty" Fan
 
The people they want in the seats (not that they won't take your money as well - but its not the cash flow they are relying on anymore...) are the types who know nothing about a Trek BBS or Star Trek.com and have never Googled the words "Star Trek" or "Enterprise" when they come online.

They want people filling the seats in the theater who only know Shatner as that crazy lawyer on Boston Legal and have vague recolections that he used to have a show where he scored alot and one of his friends was "Doctor Spock".

Sharr
 
Yea, but really, what good is it if the young kirk's timeline is not the same as the Kirk from TOS. In the end it defeats it's own purpose. which is to zero in on what made TOS so successful.
 
LoneStranger said:
Dradin said:
I hadn't thought of that - yes, in Heroes, it makes more or less sense, especially because they make a point of how Hiro Nakamuras attempts to make things right just don't work that way. If Trek XI would do something similar (With Spock realizing that you cant simply make everything "right" again), then it might actually be an interesting premise ...

Very much like H.G. Wells' The Time Machine. I think the hardest part to reconcile with this would be how to do a sequel to the movie in a way that makes sense. At the end of XI, if we are left with a Spock who is resigned to the fact that he can't change the past, it sort of leaves us in the 24th century.

Hmm, actually I think this is not what I meant. I assume you 're referring to the recent movie adaptation of Well's Time Machine (which has preciously little in common with Well's novella), where, in the beginning, the time-traveller tries to save his wife only to learn that she will simply die another way if he saves her. This concept is based upon the notion of fate, that the general direction of events is predestined. I don't like this concept too much, because it is so highly metaphysical: It seems to assume that there is some supernatural force that "decides" what is going to happen, regardless of human actions.

What I wanted to say is that, if you take a more "materialistic" view, there are two believable alternatives, none of which has anything to do with the scenario in the Time Machine movie: Either you can't change the past at all , because time and space are stable continuums where everything "has already happened" in a specific way. This still allows for interesting stories in which we find out how exactly something came to pass.

The second possibility would be that you actually can change things in the past, but that it is simply impossible to "engineer" the timeline. Every change you make, however minor, would lead to a vastly different future. Once something has been changed, there's no way back. The reason for this lies in the assumption that the universe as a whole is a chaotic system. Such a system has two important features: One thing is that you can't calculate its outcome in any shorter way than simply "watching" the process itself. This means that in a chaotic system, you can't plan the outcome of your action in the long run, you can only act ans see what happens then. The second feature is that small changes, in chaotic systems tend to have big repercussions, which, again, can't be calculated in advance.

To give an example for the second model: In "City on the Edge of Forever", the whole Federation disappears into non-existance after McCoy went through the Guardian (we can rationalize the fact that the crewmembers on the surface of the planet are still there by some kind of "temporal field" around the guardian which has protected them). Then, Kirk and Spock go through the Guardian and see to it that McCoy doesn't save Edith Keeler. When they return, everything is restored to "normal". However, I'd argue that if such changes are possible, there would be no way to get the "old" Federation back after time travel has occured (except for the possibility that it still exists in some parallel Universe). McCoy, Spock and Kirk have influenced are number of small events in the past simply by being there and breathing the air. This small changes will accumulate over time and create a future that is vastly different from the one we knew before. That's what I meant by "making it right is impossible". You could change all kinds of things, but you could never "restore" a certain timeline.

The other variation is that it "always happened this way", put differently: That Kirk, Spock and mcCoy went back and got involved in a chain of events that lead to Edith Keelers death anyway. However, then it would make little sense that the Federation "disappeared", because all the events were already part of the causality of that timeline from the start.
 
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