The answer to this is rather obvious:
Star Trek has never had "mass appeal," ever. At the peak of it's popularity Star Trek: Generations was released, and that did somewhere south of $80M. I'd argue the only reason that TMP did so well was that there was a 10 year gulf where the build-up was so intense and you had not only hungry fans but also curious non-fans who wanted to see what it was all about. It was also in the wake of the Star Wars craze.
It's a niche property. It isn't terribly accessible. The fanbase (sorry...I mean no offense) is, for the most part, terribly unapproachable and not entirely pleasant to each other or (especially) anything or anyone new. Star Trek was the grandfather of the negative nerd stigma.
If anything the Kelvin films have broken that slightly and have been more successful than expected based on what I just said. But, you're not going to get anything better than those movies at this point. Those are as "Star Trekkie" as they can be without totally losing the ability to draw on a general audience. They did a great job walking the line of Trekkie and mass-appeal with the new films...and they still don't have the appeal that the comic book movies* have.
(*side note: I think it's an unfortunate fact, since I absolutely HATE superhero movies and comic book crap. I know I'm in a minority here...but it's just SO OLD and lame at this point, I can barely think straight)
Star Trek has never had "mass appeal," ever. At the peak of it's popularity Star Trek: Generations was released, and that did somewhere south of $80M. I'd argue the only reason that TMP did so well was that there was a 10 year gulf where the build-up was so intense and you had not only hungry fans but also curious non-fans who wanted to see what it was all about. It was also in the wake of the Star Wars craze.
It's a niche property. It isn't terribly accessible. The fanbase (sorry...I mean no offense) is, for the most part, terribly unapproachable and not entirely pleasant to each other or (especially) anything or anyone new. Star Trek was the grandfather of the negative nerd stigma.
If anything the Kelvin films have broken that slightly and have been more successful than expected based on what I just said. But, you're not going to get anything better than those movies at this point. Those are as "Star Trekkie" as they can be without totally losing the ability to draw on a general audience. They did a great job walking the line of Trekkie and mass-appeal with the new films...and they still don't have the appeal that the comic book movies* have.
(*side note: I think it's an unfortunate fact, since I absolutely HATE superhero movies and comic book crap. I know I'm in a minority here...but it's just SO OLD and lame at this point, I can barely think straight)