But it's still "his"? Most people would blame that one on its director.He may not have had direct hands-on involvement with the second one

But it's still "his"? Most people would blame that one on its director.He may not have had direct hands-on involvement with the second one

*scribbles on notepad*Pretty much everyone accepts that Abrams was responsible for the third trilogy, making it "his".
Everyone except you, apparently.
This doesn't work, either.*scribbles on notepad*
Is "pretty much everyone" in the room with us now?
I don't either. He has said explicitly Johnson made choices he wouldn't have made with the script. Sounds pretty clearly like he doesn't consider it his either. If anything, I think his not making the second one is what caused so many problems, there wasn't a clear vision going through all three movies. So the second one was what it was, then the third one had to pick up from there, which as Abrams has said is not where he would have left it.Yep. It's his. Pretty much everyone accepts that Abrams was responsible for the third trilogy, making it "his".
Everyone except you, apparently.
Just walk away from it, man. Be an adult, own the "L" and move on. It really isn't that big of a deal.
IDK why they would do that if they were going to extend his contract, after the S31 debacle.They'll likely either extend Alex Kurtzman's contract to include Paramount Pictures films in 2026
Just a reminder, it's NOT Paramount anymore in anything but name.IDK why they would do that if they were going to extend his contract, after the S31 debacle.
If they were going to extend his contract, it would make more sense to give him a short-term extension and have him on a very tight leash by making him focus exclusively on streaming movies and increase the output of them. And demand that he prove to them he can make good streaming movies before being allowed Paramount Pictures.
Paramount probably wants to mitigate risk, and would not want to have any box office bombs under Kurtzman.

Because they'll look at the entire picture rather than one tiny part.IDK why they would do that if they were going to extend his contract, after the S31 debacle.
We don't know anything for now, but it seems likely that Mr. Ellison will probably hang on to the guy that he's friends with and has managed to keep the Star Trek IP in the public eye for almost a decade now.
(BTW: Section-31 may have been a clunker, but everything else since the start of DISCOVERY has been very popular with the fans)

Save the overreaction for fans.I can't imagine Ellison saying, "OFF WITH HIS HEAD!" after ONE clunker.![]()
Not to mention several elements of the fandom actively wanting to hate any new entry into the franchise's current era and certainly wanting to hate anything with direct ties to Discovery.Section-31 came at a time when a lot of fandom was Hellbent on wanting things to line up with their own particular headcanon.
If Hollywood was so cutthroat to kill a career after a single failure, we'd have never heard of folks like Alfred Hitchcock or Steven Spielberg beyond a footnote in a book about cinema history.Whatever decision is made about Kurtzman's future, Section 31 will not factor in the decision making at all. Everyone stumbles occasionally, one stumble doesn't end careers.
If Hollywood was so cutthroat to kill a career after a single failure, we'd have never heard of folks like Alfred Hitchcock or Steven Spielberg beyond a footnote in a book about cinema history.
Oh, Coppola has had more than a few, like One From the Heart. It failed so hard, it closed his Zoetrope Studios in LA.Everyone has their bombs (Spielberg had 1941. Lucas had Howard the Duck and More American Graffiti. Coppola had Jack.)
It's a lot better than its reputation. Even financially, 1941 wasn't a flop by a damn sight; it just didn't make Jaws or Close Encounters levels of money.I wouldn’t consider 1941 a bomb, per se. It’s been quite a long time since I’ve seen it but I always thought it was pretty good.
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