If u listen to the writers commentary they say because they were writing the script for both generations and all good things they couldn't remember what happens to the characters,think it would of that been better if someone else wrote generations or waited a year to do the movie and give the cast and crew time to relax and prepare for the big screen.
Who knows if strategy #2 could have worked? It might have been better, giving the cast and crew some time to breathe, and the audiences enough time to start missing them. Or it could have backfired completely, and seen the TNG features crash and burn even quicker than they ultimately did.
It's a hard one to call.![]()
Well, do you care more about the quality of your product, or do you just care about making a lot of money from your product?
Star Trek was BIG in 1994.
Really big, in fact.
The end of TNG was being made a Big Deal of in the press, and there was genuine buzz and enthusiasm for the oncoming Voyager.
I would argue that Star Trek in fact has never had as much broad mainstream appeal as it did in 1994, either before or since.
The powers that be (hallelujah!) basically had two options:
1) Strike while the iron is hot with a big screen Next Generation movie, so they could segue this massive audience seamlessly (they hoped!) from TV show to movie.
2) Cool their heels for a bit, and rebuild momentum/excitement in a TNG feature a couple years down the track, hoping that the massive publicity that followed TNG's finale can be reignited (maybe with a "All Your Favorite Next Generation Characters Are Back Together Again!" publicity drive).
Whatever we may think might have been the best decision, ultimately the studio decided not to take any chances, and threw their support behind making the transition to movies as quickly as possible.
Who knows if strategy #2 could have worked? It might have been better, giving the cast and crew some time to breathe, and the audiences enough time to start missing them. Or it could have backfired completely, and seen the TNG features crash and burn even quicker than they ultimately did.
It's a hard one to call.![]()
I still think Generations could have been saved by a 10 minute long choreographed fist fight between the two captains.
I would argue that Star Trek in fact has never had as much broad mainstream appeal as it did in 1994, either before or since.
2) Cool their heels for a bit, and rebuild momentum/excitement in a TNG feature a couple years down the track, hoping that the massive publicity that followed TNG's finale can be reignited (maybe with a "All Your Favorite Next Generation Characters Are Back Together Again!" publicity drive).
I still think Generations could have been saved by a 10 minute long choreographed fist fight between the two captains.
Only if Roddy Piper played Kirk and Keith David played Picard.
If it were me, I would have made an 8th season of TNG instead of a contrived Picard/Kirk meetup movie. The season would have focused on the characters going their separate ways. Picard would have retired and married Crusher, Riker would have gotten command of the Enterprise and married Troi, Data would have gotten command of his own ship and taken Geordi along as first officer, and Worf would have gone back to the Klingon homeworld to deal with his family situation.
Whether one is concerned with the bottom line or not, the above would've simply been atrocious. None of the TNG actors outside out Stewart and Spiner were strong enough to carry their own long-term story arcs.
If I were to have carried TNG on, on the small screen, I would've said goodbye to everyone but Stewart, Spiner and the Enterprise-D (which would've gotten a big screen facelift). Brought on younger actors as new character and then phased out Stewart and Spiner.
With new hot, young actors (That could actually act. Sorry Dorn, Burton, Sirtis, McFadden, Frakes.), then after season eight you take TNG to the big screen.
I just think there was nothing about the TNG cast that got general ticket buyers excited. I don't think there was anything about the TNG cast that said "big budget, action adventure". The only mileage they got on the big screen was with two gimmick films. First, Kirk then the time traveling Borg.
They seemed old and worn out before they ever made it to the big screen. TNG desperately needed an infusion of youth. Whether that meant nipping at the edges or doing a wholesale cast change is up for debate.
EDIT: Love the avatar!![]()
...than by just dropping the TNG cast for a whole new crew of completely different younger characters that we would only get a year to know before being cast in successive feature films.
I just think there was nothing about the TNG cast that got general ticket buyers excited. I don't think there was anything about the TNG cast that said "big budget, action adventure". The only mileage they got on the big screen was with two gimmick films. First, Kirk then the time traveling Borg.
...than by just dropping the TNG cast for a whole new crew of completely different younger characters that we would only get a year to know before being cast in successive feature films.
Overall, I think they should have made the ballsy move and created a movie-only cast. With actual movie people making the films. A cast of up and comers that they could have killed off as they pleased to create actual drama without causing an uproar in fandom.
I think my biggest criticism of the Berman years was the fact that they didn't evolve along with the rest of the TV and movie industry. They just kept doing the same things over and over.
Disposable-cast Trek WOULD be something new.
Disposable-cast Trek WOULD be something new.
I'm not necessarily pitching a "disposable cast" but characters you can move on from when their story is done.
Riker is the absolute best example of what was wrong with the Berman-era and the "franchise" thinking that had set in. His character arc was done with "The Best of Both Worlds", but they wouldn't move on from the character fearing upsetting the formula. So instead of a young man driven to be a starship captain, he ended up being Picard's administrative assistant for the last four seasons of the series. The character had lost the only thing that made him interesting within the context of the show.
Frakes simply had no business being on the show after "The Best of Both Worlds".
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