Well, Galaxy Quest is the best Star Trek movie ever made.
Well I'd put it after WOK and TMP, but it's definitely up there.
Well, Galaxy Quest is the best Star Trek movie ever made.
That some people not only don't mind these shortcomings, but actually embrace them is, well...
Easy. Galaxy Quest was essentially a Star Trek parody, so Abrams is returning the favor by re-using the sets in his Star Trek parody.JJ Ambrans has still got to explain tho why his bridge looks EXACTLY like the one from Galaxy Quest.
I know Harry was there, but in case you want some outside opinions, here is one! Wasn't sure who to send it to.
If you use this, call me LoquaciousMuse.
Well, I'm sold.
I was mad at Star Trek earlier this year for not having a real presence at Comic Con. Because that's how I roll. But I can't deny the truth that JJ just knocked my socks off.
There was a screening tonight on the west side of NYC of four scenes from the new Trek film with JJ Abrams on hand to talk a little about the film and present each scene.
Things got started with the President of Paramount Film Group, John Lesher. He introduced the trailer, then JJ.
After joking around for a second with Lescher, JJ came right out and said it - "I've never been a fan of Star Trek"
Someone in the back booed (but a good natured boo) to which JJ responded that he knows, he just never quite got it and that's the truth. He had a friend in elementary school who tried to pull him in, but it didn't work. He always felt like he wasn't really Kirk, but he wasn't really Spock either - that he was just an observer who couldn't relate to these characters.
But when the studio asked him to produce a new Star Trek film, he found himself saying yes, albeit without really knowing why - he didn't even know there were numerous Trek films already made, but he said yes nonetheless.
He got together with his usual suspects including Damon Lindelof, Alex Kurtzman, Robert Orci, a huge Trekker, and Bryan Burk, who had never seen a piece of Trek in his life. Together, they came up with a story they all loved.
When JJ read the script by Orci & Kurtzman, he saw in it the reason he got into making movies in the first place and was jealous of whoever got to direct it. Naturally one thing led to another and JJ says that now, thanks to this experience, he does consider himself a Trekker. He was excited to make a Trek that felt real, legitimate, & relatable, grounded in the reality of our world, and that the amazing cast really pulls it off. Then the scenes began . . .
_Mike -- it is fine for you to express your opinion -- it's subjective after all -- but you have no right to invalidate the opinions of others. By trying to use statistics (interpretation of which can also be subjective) to back up your argument, you disprove your own point.
In my opinion, which I won't change based on yours, I like what I am seeing and hearing in terms of both style and story. I have seen enough to know that I will enjoy this movie immensely, regardless of how anyone else receives it.
As to what it will ultimately mean for the franchise, that's not something I can opine on, since it will be *objectively* proven by the amount of cash it brings in (since a franchise is after all a business concept, not a creative one).
I think it is ironic that the more a particular "mass" media offering succeeds, the more it becomes a target for people to knock. It's simply trying to be what it is. If you want something custom tailored to your own preferences, well, you can dream, can't you?
It's not prequel. It's a reboot.
Nimoy is in it. Playing old Spock.
Prequel.
-G
"Master and Commander" is probably the best "Star Trek" movie ever made.
Easy. Galaxy Quest was essentially a Star Trek parody, so Abrams is returning the favor by re-using the sets in his Star Trek parody.![]()
The idea that changing up the shape of the space ship and sets and uniforms and then making it an action-driven flick (often referred to as "popcorn movies" for their obvious lack of meaningful plot) is somehow going to bring more fans to the franchise is ludicrous. Sounds more to me like an excuse than anything else.
Whether we realize it or not, Science Fiction has been always on the edge of acceptable viewing by the majority of audience goers. That's just the way it is. And it will continue to carry that stigma forever.
Yes, there is a very large sci-fi watching community out there. I don't deny that. But we are small compared to the rest of the world audience.
That's why Titanic buried every money making record in the book.
It doesn't matter how much money you shove up the Jeffries Tube, it doesn't matter how much foam latex you plaster to a Klingon's head, it doesn't matter whether Kirk is played by a young guy or Shatner in a truss and a toupee'... you aren't going to make Star Trek more palatable to my brothers who'd rather be listening to The Statler Brothers on 8-track tape and watching Nascar. They just aren't going to care.
-Gordon
And yet I'd bet those Nascar fans saw Star Wars.![]()