• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

USS Enterprise (eventually) on Discovery?

It continues and increases to baffle the mind just WHY they chose to do a prequel in the first case?

If they didn't even own the rights to it anyway? In a sequel that wouldn't have mattered (just how often did the Connie appear on TNG, DS9 or VOY?). They could have just moved around the properties they couldn't use.
But by setting it at almost the same time as the stuff they aren't allowed to use, there HAVE to be conflicts!
Just...why...did no one see this coming???
Unless the rights changed while they were dealing with Fuller? Do we have a time frame of when this all changed?
 
Unless the rights changed while they were dealing with Fuller? Do we have a time frame of when this all changed?

It's obvious the rights shenannigans started before. It's confirmed in the facebook thread as "after ENT ended". But IMO that at the moment when it was announced 'Star Trek: Beyond' would be delayed, they immediately delayed the (then...) official release of 'Star Trek: Discovery' to have the exact timewindow between the two again even then spoke volumes about there being rights issues involved...
 
It's obvious the rights shenannigans started before. It's confirmed in the facebook thread as "after ENT ended". But IMO that at the moment when it was announced 'Star Trek: Beyond' would be delayed, they immediately delayed the (then...) official release of 'Star Trek: Discovery' to have the exact timewindow between the two again even then spoke volumes about there being rights issues involved...
Started, certainly. But, what did they know and when did they know it?
 
Started, certainly. But, what did they know and when did they know it?

No idea. My personal pet theory (even back then) is (was) that Bad Robot has at least some rights for Star Trek television. Otherwise JJ Abrams plan to make "a big franchise including tv series, animated and tie-ins" to his then new movies wouldn't make any sense...
 
Because that's the period Fuller wanted to tell his first story in.

There is nothing about the story (that we saw) that had to be told in the time period he selected. Seriously, it is so generic that it could've taken place pretty much anywhere in the timeline.
 
No idea. My personal pet theory (even back then) is (was) that Bad Robot has at least some rights for Star Trek television. Otherwise JJ Abrams plan to make "a big franchise including tv series, animated and tie-ins" to his then new movies wouldn't make any sense...
Bidding war?
 
Then again: JJ. Abrams original plan was to blow up the original Enterprise at the beginning of Star Trek (2009), and not the "USS Kelvin", and he was straight up tolled "No" from Star Trek's owners, that he was not allowed to do that.

Also, he allegedly wanted all prime universe merchandise to stop being produced (Shatner- and Nimoy- alike figurines and stuff) to avoid "brand confusion" and was - again - stopped from it.

Also, the original constitution class model that appears in one of the deleted scenes of "Into Darkness" is (IMO!) also at least 25% different from the very original Enterprise - so they might not be the ones owning the original Enterprise either.
 
Bidding war?

Worst possible option might actually be some type of MARVEL situation, that they ripped apart the entire IP, and sold different nuggets of it to different corprations and companies. That some telecommunication provider somewhere out there owns the live-action like-ness of the original Enterprise to exclusively use it in their television spots, and somewhere else a hedgefond owns the use of the original Starfleet delta, and that the rights to both those designs for use in toys and tie-in novels are spread to two other, different companies....

Hopefully very unlikely. But not straight up impossible either - and the thought of it is honestly frightening.
 
Then again: JJ. Abrams original plan was to blow up the original Enterprise at the beginning of Star Trek (2009), and not the "USS Kelvin", and he was straight up tolled "No" from Star Trek's owners, that he was not allowed to do that.

Also, he allegedly wanted all prime universe merchandise to stop being produced (Shatner- and Nimoy- alike figurines and stuff) to avoid "brand confusion" and was - again - stopped from it.

Also, the original constitution class model that appears in one of the deleted scenes of "Into Darkness" is (IMO!) also at least 25% different from the very original Enterprise - so they might not be the ones owning the original Enterprise either.
Again, lots of missing information.
Hopefully very unlikely. But not straight up impossible either - and the thought of it is honestly frightening.
2008 was a frightening time. I mean financially.
 
(Sorry, misread your initial response there - my response was not really fitting to what you just said)
It's fine. It's frustrating to not have the details on what the rationale might be.

More generally, I'm concerned that this is going to do two things. One, divide the fan base even more over what is "real Star Trek" and further distrust in CBS. Not that there is a lot of trust to begin with. But, it's just fuel to the fire of reckless speculation and theory that keep the divisions going.
 
Honestly, this is IMO a good point in time for someone at CBS coming clear to what the actual situation regarding Star Trek's legal status actually is...

At this point, it seems the choices made in creating new Star Trek are vastly more informed by rights issues than actually by creative choices. And that is not a good foundation for good decisions.

They should come clear. If the situation actually is "Sorry, we can't ever do TNG-era stuff ever again, or use the original stuff in any capacitiy" - it would be crushing. But from now on this is going to be the main suspicion of fans anyway, and them dancing around the issue and never directly addressing it is NOT going to help them in any way.

The only thing fans hate more than "No more content because of rights issues" is "No more content because of rights issues, but we are trying (and failing) to work around this stuff anyway, and lie to your faces while doing that". That'd be even worse.
 
Laugh all you want, but as some have noted DSC went to great pains to do Trek stuff like the mirror universe, the Enterprise, the Klingon war and so on. If they were concerned with the ship looking more like TOS later down the timeline, then they wasted their time and energy on that.
I really don't follow what you're saying. Who wasted their time on what?

Anyway, I never said that the 1701 had to look exactly like the TOS version.
 
Also, the original constitution class model that appears in one of the deleted scenes of "Into Darkness" is (IMO!) also at least 25% different from the very original Enterprise - so they might not be the ones owning the original Enterprise either.

I think people over-interpret what was seen in that scene. It was clearly unfinished VFX meant to represent an in-universe scale model. Who knows what they were thinking of putting there in the final? A model of the real JJ-Prise? An abstract piece of art? An Imperial Star Destroyer? It means about as much as the shot of Voyager fighting the Borg in that First Contact trailer.
 
Last edited:
Also, the original constitution class model that appears in one of the deleted scenes of "Into Darkness" is (IMO!) also at least 25% different from the very original Enterprise - so they might not be the ones owning the original Enterprise either.
No it's not. It is almost exactly the same.
 
Also, the original constitution class model that appears in one of the deleted scenes of "Into Darkness" is (IMO!) also at least 25% different from the very original Enterprise - so they might not be the ones owning the original Enterprise either.

I didn't see it as 25% different, and may well be why it is a deleted scene.
 
They might not have attempted to market that Constitution in "Into Darkness" as it would be just a model on set, like the Saturn V, or NX-01.

But the USS Enterprise in Discovery? They'll try to market that under the Discovery logo, and I suppose they can't unless it is different enough to not be strictly under their TOS logo. At which point it is only a marketing problem, but also possibly how many people they need to split the royalty check towards.
 
They should have left the Enterprise and TOS elements out if they couldn't use them for legal reasons.

Well they managed to get around that, so I don't see why they "should" have done this.

I really don't follow what you're saying. Who wasted their time on what?

Anyway, I never said that the 1701 had to look exactly like the TOS version.

What I meant is: if the makers of DSC were so concerned with canon that they redesigned the TOS Enterprise so that it could become closer to TOS before going for TMP, it was a waste of time. They should've just made an updated version the way they wanted. Obsessing with "fitting" with canon, especially in TOS' case given what's been done since, is pointless.
 
What I meant is: if the makers of DSC were so concerned with canon that they redesigned the TOS Enterprise so that it could become closer to TOS before going for TMP, it was a waste of time. They should've just made an updated version the way they wanted. Obsessing with "fitting" with canon, especially in TOS' case given what's been done since, is pointless.

From the sounds of it, making the DSC Connie possibly fit with TOS version was a personal decision by the designers (Scott and John), not a mandate from the production staff.

The VFX team went and changed one of those elements (the straight nacelles), not Eaves and Scott.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top