Hence my liking for an animated/CGI series, something that doesn't compete directly with big screen budgets and visuals.
Berman won't have anything to do with the series, so his specific mistakes won't be repeated.
It's possible that there could be a character or storyline in the next movie that could provide a launching point for a new series, much as DS9 spun off of BOBW, "Ensign Ro," "The Host," and "The Wounded."
Berman won't have anything to do with the series, so his specific mistakes won't be repeated.
Well, they won't be repeated by Berman...
Even Quinto I don't think will stay on Heroes.
They could use the next couple movies to introduce one or two "bridge" characters for the TV series. Trek really needs to have an overall game plan for all media, not just movies, but extending to TV. I'd also bring in books, video games, internet stuff, you name it. But definitely there needs to be a strategy for movies and TV as the mainstay of Trek.It'd most likely be set in the new continuity, which furthers the problem as at the moment, anyone who makes the decision and writes out the check is going to want the people from the movies, and that's simply not going to happen.
Can't argue with that. I also liked the Vulcan stuff from S4. Even the Klingon, S31 and Augment plotlines were handled better than I'd hoped (feared).As for ENT, the problem isn't necessarily when it was set, but that it was a prequel and until season four, the people in charge didn't want to do a prequel. "The Andorian Incident" and season four are examples of what ENT should have been from the get go.
I don't buy that in the least. If your writers are running out of ideas, hire more writers. Hire more people for the production team. More episodes means more money coming in means you can increase the payroll. What's the problem? Where I work, when we get more projects, we just hire more people (and we're happy to have the work!) "Ideas" are always the easy part - especially if you hire new people with new ideas.I think the American series model is part of the problem as regards to a franchise becoming stale. Producing 24-26 episodes every year is of course going to lead to fatigue - both from the production team and from the audience.
the source of trouble beyond just sci fi - is that the audience is fragmenting wildly.Producing 24-26 episodes every year is of course going to lead to fatigue - both from the production team and from the audience.
In keeping with this thread topic there is certainty as Trek on TV offers more character development for us and revenue streams for a ROI for CBS Television.cable is producing such a volume of good stuff that the audiences are gravitating to the shows that serve their narrow niche interests in how they define a "good show."
neither CBS nor Showtime are likely to be good homes for Star Trek. I'm increasingly thinking some basic cable outlet might work the best,
More episodes means more money coming in means you can increase the payroll. What's the problem? Where I work, when we get more projects, we just hire more people (and we're happy to have the work!) "Ideas" are always the easy part - especially if you hire new people with new ideas.
Torchwood: Children of Earth mini series was aired over 5 consecutive nights...
Now if you took that model and expanded it a bit for Star Trek and the US situation- what you could do is produce 3 mini series per year that ran over 5 nights again so a total of 15 episodes.
...if Trek is to return to the small screen it would work best as event TV
I don't think a new series is a certainty at all--but threads here are mostly wish fulfilment. What we, as fans of the franchise, would like to see if there were another series.
But I don't think there's any actual potential for another TV series at the moment. Not while hour long scripted television is in dire straits on broadcast telly. The industry is a mess right now (and once you factor in the licence fee, even worse shape--just look at what happened to Sarah Connor Chronicles getting axed in favour of FOX's wholly owned train wreck Dollhouse ), which is why I think the films are the focus of the franchise, currently.
If Star Trek ends up on basic cable, it will probably follow the basic cable format and not the network format. But why do you assume that 13 episodes will be 13 great episodes? It could just as easily be 13 wretched episodes or 6 good and 7 bad, or whatever. If there's a show I like, I'm happy to watch however many the producers think they can produce. If they need more help, they can hire more help. That's hardly my problem. A competent writing team can put out 24 good episodes. A shitty writing team can't put out one."Mad Men", "Sopranos", "Six Feet Under" all have done it and all were/are successful. That is about 9 1/2 hours of a serialized story. That would be like 4 feature films. I don't think Trek needs to be 22-26 episodes for a season. I would rather have 13 great stories than say 6 great stories, 10 good stories and 7 bad stories being canon.
"Mad Men" delivers consistently a great story
The mini-series format is dead in America, so you can't market it as anything. I dunno why it's dead, but the inability to take advantage of economies of scale probably have something to do with it. The last mini-series I can think of was the remake of The Prisoner, and that flopped horribly, which won't make anyone else any more eager to try that format.Just sometimes less is more - you can market a mini series as important event TV, in a way you cant with a weekly series.
Well if they have 30 story ideas and treatments and 24 get made all 24 still can't be great.If Star Trek ends up on basic cable, it will probably follow the basic cable format and not the network format. But why do you assume that 13 episodes will be 13 great episodes? It could just as easily be 13 wretched episodes or 6 good and 7 bad, or whatever.
I disagree.A competent writing team can put out 24 good episodes
I always interpereted the jump to help goose the "ooh-ahh" factor in introducting new tech. New Enterprise, holodeck, new phasers, ect ect ect.What was the reason to jump to the 24th C, anyway?
Well if they have 30 story ideas and treatments and 24 get made all 24 still can't be great.If Star Trek ends up on basic cable, it will probably follow the basic cable format and not the network format. But why do you assume that 13 episodes will be 13 great episodes? It could just as easily be 13 wretched episodes or 6 good and 7 bad, or whatever.
If they have 30 story ideas and do treatments for 18 and make 13 scripts that get rewritten it should be better stories as 'the cream of the crop' so to speak.
I disagree.A competent writing team can put out 24 good episodes
The idea of a pop music band writing 24 songs and in 1983 putting 8 or 10 songs on an album (LP, audiocassette & CD) and the rest are B-sides or unreleased versus the past 10 years where a audio CD is considered a CD album release with 13-18 songs on it. All are not going to be good. While it is off topic and beyond the scope of this discussion but should be mentioned why a record label requiring an album to be 13-18 songs is part of the reason the CD album is a dying format anyway for pop music.
Good writers can do 18 treatments and 13 scripts and fine tune and hone those scripts that should be better than 24 episode scripts.
HBO only does that because of the extraordinary caliber of a (very) few of their shows - which means they have no competition and can afford to be cavalier about their audience. Other than premium cable, nobody can afford that kind of arrogance and even on premium cable, shows usually come out on a regular schedule.but I'd hope they wouldn't follow HBO's example and make us wait for up to two and a half years between seasons.
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