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- Oct 27, 2017
Co-produced by Dan Schneider.In Tarantino Trek, Starfleet is going to be renamed Starfeet.
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Co-produced by Dan Schneider.In Tarantino Trek, Starfleet is going to be renamed Starfeet.
Looks like the film and tv rights to Star Trek are about to go back under one roof.
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CBS, Viacom Reach Tentative Deal on Team to Lead Combined Company
CBS and Viacom reached a working agreement on the management team of a combined company, with CBS acting chief Joe Ianniello to oversee all of CBS branded assets and Viacom boss Bob Bakish to become CEO.www.google.com
Maybe the combined company will cancel Discovery at the least.It's too late for Picard, but maybe there is hope yet.
I mean.. I see your point, but was it ever realistic to expect that it *would* have a cultural impact? Yes, I know there are some remakes that have managed to surpass the originals, but never has one done so by dumbing down the original product into a big dumb Hollywood Summer blockbuster, which Star Trek 2009 objectively did... (Even if I did find myself enjoying it at the time.)You know, ten years later and Star Trek 2009 has had no cultural impact.
Tarantino should NEVER do an adaptation.
He would fuck it up.
Whenever you listen to the pop culture ramblings in his movies, you can tell that he doesn't understand a lot of IPs.
Like when Bill in Kill Bill said that Clark Kent is the alter ego and a way for Superman to portray the way he sees humanity... even though he was raised from infancy by American farmers as Clark and Superman was created by him decades later.
He would destroy the characters and the lore.
People would start hating him after that movie. I'm talking about Rian Johnson x 100.
Honestly? I think I'd like to see Tarantino do a Star Trek movie just to see how big of an absolute fucking trainwreck it would be.
Amongst all the other fucked up stuff in that movie, Nicholas Meyer wanted Spock's death scene with that final shot of Kirk slumped against the glass to be the last fucking shot of the movie.
lmao, could you imagine if the movie really ended that way?
In terms of what it brought to the table as a work of art Star Trek 09 had all the impact of a light breeze.You know, ten years later and Star Trek 2009 has had no cultural impact.
...Nicholas Meyer wanted Spock's death scene with that final shot of Kirk slumped against the glass to be the last fucking shot of the movie. ...
Interesting and provoking dialogue being replaced by "witty" quips and banter. Flashy big shit go boom spectacle over ideas and thought.
In terms of what it brought to the table as a work of art Star Trek 09 had all the impact of a light breeze.
In terms of being part of the first wave of what we now call "Nerd Culture" Trek 09 was very significant.
Interesting and provoking dialogue being replaced by "witty" quips and banter. Flashy big shit go boom spectacle over ideas and thought.
A hollow and soulless product made for every imbecile and "I know what that is!" addled normie.
In that regard Trek 09 was deeply impactful movie for all the wrong reasons.![]()
Hers the thing.The sad part is the Star Trek series and films had lots of witty banter that tended to work pretty well on a regular basis, while Star Trek 09 just had the dialogue of a superhero flick. Its also worth noting that some of the biggest spectacle moment in the original movies were things like the Enterprise backing up or a ship just flying by in glorious detail. Now everthing have to be a fucking mess and you can barely see any of it. If I worked on the CGI for anything in the new movies, I'd be pissed since the ships are barely visible at non-motion blurr speed.
I'm curious where you heard that. As I understand it the movie played out the way Meyer wanted it to with the exception of the final shot on the Genesis planet showing The Torpedo/Coffin (which was supposedly added after a test screening). I get the impression the funeral scene followed by the Kirk "I feel young" scene was how Meyer intended the movie to end. Still somber but not as bad as ending it with Kirk slumped over in the engine room.
I think it could be fun, just don't have any pretenses of it being part of any canon and let it stand on its own. The characters and lore are getting destroyed since 2009 (arguably earlier), at least Tarintino would do it in style.Tarantino should NEVER do an adaptation.
He would fuck it up.
Whenever you listen to the pop culture ramblings in his movies, you can tell that he doesn't understand a lot of IPs.
Like when Bill in Kill Bill said that Clark Kent is the alter ego and a way for Superman to portray the way he sees humanity... even though he was raised from infancy by American farmers as Clark and Superman was created by him decades later.
He would destroy the characters and the lore.
People would start hating him after that movie. I'm talking about Rian Johnson x 100.
If Spock is Half Human-Half Vulcan and has Green Blood does that mean regular Vulcans have different blood?This is a little complicated but if you go through the commentary Meyer did on the movie he alludes to the the fact that he had a lot of more controversial ideas in the script that didn't made it into the movie or were modified on the fly and the actors and producers began to realize what they had on their hands. Even the famous "He's not really dead, as long as we remember him." was sort of added at the last minute by Meyer's testimony. The script went through constant rewrites and Meyer apparently wrote the final version of it in less than a month. While Meyer at the beginning wanted to end the movie on the shot of Kirk slumped over and hopeless, by his later admission he says he changed that when it became clear the cast started believeing in what they were working on.
He did really hate the idea of literally bringing Spock back though, and he mentions in the commentary that while he was willing to come back to the franchise, he refused to have anything to do with the movie where they bring Spock back. True to his word he came back for both Voyage Home and Undiscovered Country.
The makeup thing might be a rumor brought on by that famous production photo of him next to Ricardo Montalban, but if I recall correctly it was something Meyer thought he could get away with because the blood was going to be green and not red. I'll see if I can dig something more concrete up later, but that's the gist of it. Either way I implore you to check out the Director's Cut version that has Meyer's commentary over it. There are actually two sets of commentary, one in text as subtitles and another with him just talking, and they actually differ quite substantially sometimes. The text commentary was made first I think.