So you front load huge costs on the production. That is also a train wreck.Going into a production with poor planning is a train wreck.
So you front load huge costs on the production. That is also a train wreck.Going into a production with poor planning is a train wreck.
The point is if you can't deconstruct derivative trek if you don't know trek.I don't think you need to know Trek to write good Trek. Indeed, I think knowing too much can be a recipe for writing derivative crap.
You need to know star trek, otherwise your canon will clash with established canon and confuse the viewer on an emotional level.I do think however having a background as a SF writer - or at least a fan of written SF - would be a big help. Discovery notably lacked much in the way of high-concept SF ideas last season, and thus fell back on stock tropes way more than it needed to.
How much does a 6 week boot camp cost, for a handful of writers?So you front load huge costs on the production. That is also a train wreck.
You think the history of Star Trek and what works and what doesn't can be done in 6 weeks?How much does a 6 week boot camp cost, for a handful of writers?
That's a small amount of money relative to the money being spent on this show.
Ignoring just production derailments, you also need to factor in the value of pulling in more fans with more respect to what star trek is, and even more relevantly the savings in writing time, when people can leap frog/piggy back on what has already been done.
Yes. The challenge is writing a good story while restraining spending. The writer may need to be clever to make this work. But cleverness might actually improve the story.So you front load huge costs on the production. That is also a train wreck.
Exactly. It's a delicate balancing act and writers needing a boot camp definitely isn't a recipe for cleverness.Yes. The challenge is writing a good story while restraining spending. The writer may need to be clever to make this work. But cleverness might actually improve the story.![]()
Trek movies have always been aimed at the masses. It's only The Motion Picture, The Voyage Home, First Contact and especially the Kelvin movies that succeeded.Most of the time, exept the recent Kelvin films, Star trek movies have been directed at fans, and not wide appeal, They hoped it had enough appeal to get new viewers in, but not usually.
Also, aiming for only the fan base is useless in growing the brand.Trek movies have always been aimed at the masses. It's only The Motion Picture, The Voyage Home, First Contact and especially the Kelvin movies that succeeded.
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