Starship Polaris said:
Samuel T. Cogley said:
archeryguy1701 said:
Trek has rolled along just fine in 4 series and 3-soon-to-be-4 movies without him.
Agreed. Rolled right into a pit of oblivion.
As far as we know the entire Universe is, of course, doing the same thing.
You're quibbling about the length of time that it takes, that's all.
To put
archeryguy1701's quantification in a different way:
Trek with Shatner: approximately ninety-four hours.
Trek without Shatner: approximately six hundred and forty hours.
Was Trek-featuring-Shatner on an ever-upward trajectory of success, prior to his leaving the Franchise?
No, no it wasn't - his last three appearences stuttered along (ST 5, 6 and 7) in terms of profitability and popularity. The studio didn't wind down the TOS-based movies because of a spasm of Shatner-loathing on the part of some executive; the future was pretty clearly written in the gross-proceeds-versus-cost of the TOS gang's outings.
Did Trek ever achieve the
measurable success (popularity of TV series, box office performance of individual films) without Shatner that it did with him?
Yes, it did.
Is there
any evidence whatever that Trek would have generated an additional six hundred-plus popular and profitable hours of content post-ST:TUC if Shatner's participation had actually been required in order for the Franchise to prosper?
No, no there's not.
So...one of these days the Sun is apparently going to run through its hydrogen, go on fusing heavier and heavier elements until it grows huge and red and cool and then shrinks and eventually dies. Our best projections are that the entire Universe will come to an end at some point long thereafter. Notwithstanding that, it's kind of uncharitable and pointless to characterize all of our lives as nothing more than a part of the process of everything "rolling into a pit of oblivion," and declaring the Trek Franchise to have done the same as a result of ceasing to employ a particular actor is similarly looking through the wrong end of the telescope.