As special effects get better--each trek series needs to be farther in the future to keep up--no more prequels
Couldn't they just down play the special effects?As special effects get better--each trek series needs to be farther in the future to keep up--no more prequels
Couldn't they just down play the special effects?
My reaction to the survey results, per each question:Hello,
It is a little late in posting the results. I hope the link below works for you. We are at 52 responses as of yet.
Star Trek Survey Results
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We will continue to leave it open to what else would be said.
I don't think we'll ever see Trek go past the 24th-Century. At best, we might see a reboot/reimagining of TNG at some point, but I really wouldn't be surprised if we just stick with the TOS era for the foreseeable future.
Are you sure you're not just unconsciously describing West World?Or they'll return to the form of reimagining that had some guy taking Samurai and Wild Western films (in terms of appearances or actions) and making Star Wars from a combination of those...
I suppose you could take the Alien: Isolation approach, where you deliberately make it retro-futuristic and extrapolate from there. Or you could have some sort of incident that happened in the future-past that caused everyone to stop using certain technologies, like email/social media and artificial intelligence.But TNG proved basing the future off of an original as opposed to inanely copying the original could be far better.
I'd actually be excited to see a fourth movie in that series (assuming they keep going in the same direction with it), but at this point it's unlikely, given the fact that Beyond was a bit of a financial bomb.Then again, "Star Trek Beyond" really hit the spot in the way its two predecessors had not (but were on the right track) so reboots can be done.
I tend to think that TNG was a fluke--a very successful fluke, but a fluke all the same. It came at the right time when there wasn't much sci-fi out there and it resonated with an audience hungry for the genre. It probably could have worked as a total reimagining of TOS, but the only reason it wasn't was because TOS was still continuing as a fairly successful movie franchise at the time.A shame. Reimagining of the same thing over and over again will eventually be pointless. Or they'll return to the form of reimagining that had some guy taking Samurai and Wild Western films (in terms of appearances or actions) and making Star Wars from a combination of those...
There's only so many original tropes to begin with. But TNG proved basing the future off of an original as opposed to inanely copying the original could be far better.
Then again, "Star Trek Beyond" really hit the spot in the way its two predecessors had not (but were on the right track) so reboots can be done. I'm truly ambivalent.
I don't know why fans insist that all of the FX match up, especially if it's a prequel. Just go with it, what's consistency ever had to do with STAR TREK? During TOS' run, treating the show as if it were really happening and keeping track of its own canon it was establishing helped to compensate, some, for the low budget and obvious problems it created. But after that, it wasn't such a selling point, it seems and it shouldn't have been. My feelings on where STAR TREK should go now, especially with the next movie, STAR TREK 4, is that it should go back to a ST09 vibe, where it dares to be different from Trekkies expectations. More action-packed, more of a thrill ride. Up the COOL factor, as far as it'll go. That's what I want to see the next movie be. That's what I want to see happening with the franchise, overall.
The only thing I would insist NOT be changed is the optimistic view of the future. That's all. Otherwise, it's all good. I do not care for Discovery's look, at all. It has yet to really get 'good' but its heart is in the right place. It wants to entertain, it wants to inspire and all that good shite. But its growing pains aren't as fun to go through as maybe TOS' first season is. I'm just glad that new STAR TREK's being made, because it had no business ever going off the air. And now, "they" are talking about bringing even more STAR TREK to the screen and I'm just like ... FINALLY!!! Finally, these people get it. More STAR TREK is not the problem, as long as it entertains and fires the imagination.
The only thing I would insist NOT be changed is the optimistic view of the future.
I guess it depends on what flavor of "optimistic" you use. TNG is usually at/near the top of fans favorite list, but one of the things about TNG that consistently gets pointed out as a flaw is the particular version of optimistic employed.The optimistic view of the future is one of those things that has always been consistent and is a prime example of an expectation from the franchise.
I somewhat agree. The future of Star Trek needs to be on of realistic optimism, where people aren't perfect, and the universe isn't perfect, but it's still a demonstrably better place. One of the things that turns me off somewhat to grimdark depictions of the future is that they ultimately state that in a few hundred years we'll have basically learned nothing as a species.There would be nothing wrong with showing a future where they've taken all the things we've already figured out and adding a few notches. But not to the point of a goofy pie-in-the-sky optimistic wonder world Star Trek series.
I guess it depends on what flavor of "optimistic" you use. TNG is usually at/near the top of fans favorite list, but one of the things about TNG that consistently gets pointed out as a flaw is the particular version of optimistic employed.
Near perfect Human beings living in a near perfect society.
TOS never had this, they were simply regular people living in the future.
One of the notable things DS9 changed (frequently pointed out) was stepping away from TNG's depiction of a "optimistic" future society. It wasn't just being on the frontier (where do you think TNG was?), DS9 significantly omitted the candy coated optimism.
VOY vision of optimistic was covered in a thick layer of pragmatism.
ENT had a bubbly optimistic captain, who occupied a limited-optimism universe. Part of Jonathon Archer's character arc was his realizing his initial view of the world was false. His earlier optimistic beliefs were seriously toned down.
There would be nothing wrong with showing a future where they've taken all the things we've already figured out and adding a few notches. But not to the point of a goofy pie-in-the-sky optimistic wonder world Star Trek series..
I somewhat agree. The future of Star Trek needs to be on of realistic optimism, where people aren't perfect, and the universe isn't perfect, but it's still a demonstrably better place. One of the things that turns me off somewhat to grimdark depictions of the future is that they ultimately state that in a few hundred years we'll have basically learned nothing as a species.
@TheGameAce, at this point, I'm not convinced they can do a Star Trek series as popular as TNG without doing a hard reboot like BSG. The only way to avoid a reboot of some kind is to basically make the show retrofuturism, where all the social and technological stuff that's happened since Sarah Silverman was on Voyager never happened and only Star Trek-related technologies were developed.
Another possibility is a soft reboot, where the same things basically happened, but you add in new things like social media and retcon everything that's inconsistent or inconvenient. (Like maybe the Star Trek we know was a holodeck documentary done in the style of an late Twentieth Century TV show.)
But my guess is that you need a clean reset to effectively tell moderns sci-fi stories that are sufficiently relevant. Take the Borg, for instance. Nothing about them makes sense. For instance, if you had nanoprobes that could convert a person into a Borg, you wouldn't beam over drone, you'd beam over aerosol canisters all over the ship that spread a mist of nanoprobes that infect people and ship's systems alike. Heck, just abduct someone from a shuttlecraft, pump them full of nanoprobes and use them as a carrier. Their brain would be under Borg control, but they would look normal. The shuttlecraft lands in the bay, then all the carrier has to do is exhale. The nanoprobes quietly spread but don't start taking over people until they've reached a certain concentration throughout the ship, by which time it's already too late. The ship just disappears on day and no one knows what happened. (NOTE: I'm totally using this in a plot for a story I'm working on, BTW.) The Borg have all kinds of unnecessary limitations like this that prevent them from becoming the apocalyptically powerful, make-you-pee-your-pants race they should be.
I must confess that I wish Vulcans had been played consistently, over the years. I like them very stoic and deadpan. To me ... that's what Vulcans are like. But they've been played as LOTR elfs for so long, I just have to throw my hands up, anymore and say "F-it!" What can you do? You know? What can you do ... But keeping track of every grunt and groan, making sure they match up, throughout the franchise does seem constipated. Even to the point of the digitally updated & revamped "Space Seed" dropping in Chekov, just to ensure that it connects with TWoK. I found that to be particularly risible.Consistency is always important no matter what you're doing, and has always had something to do with Star Trek. In some cases, you don't HAVE to have it (Hogan's Heroes is a prime example) but it always adds extra quality to the show, especially if you're developing a story over time, which is a story arc. Usually without that, it can lead to bad or lazy writing, as well as pissing off longtime fans that love to follow all kinds of details, and get really enthusiastic about the series. I mean, it'd be silly, especially in a very science-y style series like Trek, to not have appropriate consistency, which is one of the reasons Discovery is getting so much heat from fans. Trek is very much a nerd series, being the more science style counterpart to Star Wars (at least in my opinion), and I know a good deal of fans look for that consistency.
Expectations are also just as important as being able to forge a new path in the series, and in my honest opinion should also go hand-in-hand. If you have a hardcore fanbase with specific expectations for new Trek content, especially if they've liked all the older stuff (think 90's series and prior), if something completely different is done instead, it may very well not feel like actual Star Trek, yet again going back to Discovery as an example, such as dropping their F-bombs.
Well, yes, not every movie, not every series episode has to be Fast & Furious, but having a ponderous story only to reveal that the secret, at the end, the great mystery, turns out to be ... what? ... an old Man behind the curtain. Or just to preach to the choir, here, "wouldn't it be great if we were all a little nicer to eachother?" That sucks. You know? That really sucks. If they're going to pull that shite, better make it a fun ride getting there, so it doesn't matter as much.However, I do agree a bit more action would be nice to see in Trek, especially going back to the TNG, VOY, DS9 style, but not too much since that isn't what the series was primarily built around. There needs to be a good balance, taking everything that works from the formula used to make the past series that worked out well, but making it unique in it's own way still, without straying too far.
The optimistic view of the future is one of those things that has always been consistent and is a prime example of an expectation from the franchise. While it may not be realistic (although we are talking science fiction anyways, which isn't technically fully grounded in reality) or ever happen, it's still a good thing to be able to dream, and have an escape where things look hopeful, especially nowadays where the world seems to be coming apart at the seams.
All-in-all, Discovery in my opinion fell flat and abandoned a lot of things of the past, attempting to come up with a new modern, edgy formula, that feels like JJ Abrams' work.
If we're fortunate enough to get a new series, I think the best route is to go back towards the formula that worked back with the TNG era, and build upon that further, expanding the story going forward in years, not backwards to milking the TOS era over and over.
Boy Scout Oath ....It would be great to have that wholesomeness remain in STAR TREK. Where the show demonstrated through its fiction that it's actually cool just to be a decent person
Star Wars can get away with a lot because it's separated by great distance and time. It doesn't matter if we have Twitter, because they didn't have Twitter a billion years ago on the other side of the universe. Thus, Star Wars is sort of insulated from new technologies in a way that's similar to fantasy movies.Hand-in-hand with Starwars, I see them both as franchises that paved the way for modern sci-fi.
I didn't mean to suggest that the stuff never happened in the "soft reboot" scenario. I meant to imply that what happened in the documentary happened in real life, but in a slightly different way or with different technology that people wouldn't know about in the late 20th Century. That way, you could have the same actors reprise their roles, but they could be slightly darker, edgier versions of themselves, or have characteristics that weren't shown in the holo-documentary. Maybe the Doctor from Voyager actually has a mullet, or Janeway has a cybernetic arm made by Seven of Nine after she lost an arm fighting the Hirogen. So not throwing everything entirely out. Just adjusting to bring it in line with the times, add some interesting twists, and making especially clear to people that "Threshold" NEVER, EVER HAPPENED!I think seeing more social-style ideas being brought in (such as some sort of internet in a way) could definitely be interesting, although I think if you went as far as pretty well excusing all of past Trek as nothing but an illusion/documentary, stuff that never really happened, the series implodes and fans will pick up their pitchforks and torches.
You mean like the way Geordi was captured and turned into a Romulan agent, with no memory of it even happening, in the episode "The Mind's Eye"? Kinda hard to argue that it couldn't happen when it already has.For the shuttlecraft idea, they'd have to get it alone far out in space, undetected, and without the shuttle being able to send out an emergency signal.
Fair enough, although it would set up a really cool "Power of Frendship" arc, where every major power in the Alpha Quadrant would be forced to come together to defend themselves. Imagine a fleet of anti-Borg Federation-Romulan hybrid ships that can weave Tholan energy webs!Without actual limitations though, they'd have no legitimate opposition with exception of the Q. It'd create an enemy that cannot be defeated, and would have just wiped the federation out. If they don't have limits, they can't be countered in any way.
The problem with the Borg isn't their complexity. If anything, they became less complex (or at least less mysterious) as time when on. The problem is that they're techno-zombies that are basically just a metaphor for corporate America in the 1990s, and that's never been updated. If depictions of the Borg had even kept parity with the zombie genre, they'd still be half way interesting. Then again, I don't think we've even seen a new Borg on TV in 15 years, so...A good villain should be strong, but complex.
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