STAR TREK: A Personal View On News From the Final Frontier

STAR TREK: A Personal View On News From the Final Frontier

CBM's Ed Gross takes a look at the latest headlines from the world of Star Trek, and throws in a few comments here or there, whether it's regarding the release date of JJ Abrams' Star Trek sequel or certain anniversaries from the Final Frontier.

By EdGross - Dec 07, 2011 05:12 AM EST
Filed Under: Star Trek

As has been well reported by this point, the sequel to JJ Abrams' Star Trek will be reaching theatres - in 3D! - during the summer of 2013. Am I the only one who feels that four years is far too much time between sequels? Prior to 2009, the franchise was in its death throes - Enterprise was canceled, Nemesis was a box office disaster, the official website was fading away, and on it went. Then Abrams' Star Trek, created with a healthy dose of the Star Wars spirit, was released and served to reinvigorate the entire thing. Suddenly Trek was back in vogue, even driving interest back in to the original series and its various spin-offs.

There was genunine excitement about Star Trek again, not only from the point of view of the fans, but from the mainstream audience (an essential component for Trek to work and thrive) and the media as well. Essentially the concept had been successfully jump-started and some momentum instilled.... but then to wait FOUR years? It will certainly be interesting to see whether or not, in this pop culture world of extremely limited attention spans, the same level of excitement will be there when it finally arrives. While admittedly comparing a film to a television show probably doesn't make sense, I remember that when Heroes went on an extended hiatus for a variety of reasons (not the least of which was a Writers Guild strike), when the show finally reeturned it had lost about a quarter of its massive audience, driving home the fact that the audience will move on.

What's the general consensus out there? Is four years too long a stretch?

On the same front, while we know Benicio Del Toro is out as the film's villain, there is the persistent rumor that the crew is going to go up against a newly-imagined version of Khan. It would seem that Trek would benefit by going in a new direction rather than rely on one of the franchise's most popular adversaries -- which is not to say that the notion of Khan couldn't be revisited down the road. Shouldn't that character be left alone for the time being?

Elsewhere, the franchise is celebrating a few anniveraries this year. For starters, this is the 20th anniversary of the final film featuring the entire crew from the original television series, Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country. To commemorate that release, check out the film's teaser and final trailer as well as a humorous take on how Abrams would have directed the film.







This is also the 25th annivsary of Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home, or, as it's more popularly known, "the one with the whales." That film was particularly significant in that because it dealt with Kirk and company coming back to the present, and it was laced with some wonderful humor, it was the first Star Trek film to break the confines of the fandom and appeal to the mainstream audience. In watching the unofficial trilogy (Wrath of Khan, Search For Spock The Voyage Home), Leonard Nimoy's desire to move away from violent action adventure to take on a lighter approach absolutely pays off. Below, check out the trailer for the film as well as its "lost ending".







And finally, today marks the latest anniversary of a day that will live on in infamy. Oh, it's "Pearl Harbor Day" as well. What we're referring to in this instance is the 32nd anniversary release of Star Trek: The Motion Picture, for which we have a fan-made re-edit of the film's trailer. Opinion: is ST:TMP still considered a borefest or have feelings for it improved over the years?

Quentin Tarantino Finally Explains Why His R-Rated STAR TREK Movie Is Never Going To Happen
Related:

Quentin Tarantino Finally Explains Why His R-Rated STAR TREK Movie Is "Never Going To Happen"

STAR TREK: Colm Meaney On Possible Miles O'Brien Return And What He REALLY Thinks About Trekkies (Exclusive)
Recommended For You:

STAR TREK: Colm Meaney On Possible Miles O'Brien Return And What He REALLY Thinks About Trekkies (Exclusive)

DISCLAIMER: ComicBookMovie.com is protected under the DMCA (Digital Millenium Copyright Act) and... [MORE]

ComicBookMovie.com, and/or the user who contributed this post, may earn commissions or revenue through clicks or purchases made through any third-party links contained within the content above.

MarkCassidy
MarkCassidy - 12/7/2011, 5:58 AM
The only Trek movie I flat out disliked was Generations. A complete bore and a shameful way to kill off Kirk. A lot of the others were pretty meh but I always enjoyed elements of them at least. Wrath Of Khan/Search For Spock tie as my faves.
MarkCassidy
MarkCassidy - 12/7/2011, 6:47 AM
lmao Tea, that gif is priceless..and really horrible!
DetBullock
DetBullock - 12/7/2011, 7:50 AM
The Motion Picture is one of the best in the series and a great Sci-Fi film in its own right.
It's the first Star Trek thing I saw and I loved it.
Newbus
Newbus - 12/7/2011, 7:51 AM
Bring in Treymaine or 'Q'
Newbus
Newbus - 12/7/2011, 7:56 AM
@Nomis - I grew up watching the 60s TV series when it was repeated and it was more about tackling contempary issues of the day rather than special effects...oh and Kirk knocking off every female in the universe.
Shadowelfz
Shadowelfz - 12/7/2011, 9:29 AM
Four years between the movies is a long time but I'd rather wait an extra year to make sure its perfect than get a substandard product. Still, its bad for business considering how fickle and short-attentioned today's audience is. Do you think the Twilight series would have been as successful if fans had to wait three to four years between the films?
6of13
6of13 - 12/7/2011, 9:38 AM
I don't like them reusing Khan for villian.
Ceejay
Ceejay - 12/7/2011, 9:39 AM
There's some mass confusion here about what Star Trek is and was supposed to be. Films Star Trek was never meant to be so anyone thinking Star Trek is a franchise based on movies simply aint got a clue. Gene Roddenberry made up Star Trek to be a utopian view of what we can evolve to if we managed to get past our current state of conflict. It was meant to be a TV SHOW not a bunch of stupid action films and it wasn't meant to be villain of the week crap either. Star Trek was meant to be science fiction tales, focusing on our advancement, intelligence and exploration. Naturally the network made him compromise hence the Original TV series being filled frequently with stupid bad guys, alien of the week, fist fights and space battles.

The film crap only came about because of Paramount's desire to jump on the bandwagon of the success of Star Wars and apart from the very first Motion Picture and Wrath of Khan, the movies basically went against everything Gene Roddenberry meant Star Trek to deliver because action movies are not the format of Star Trek. Sure some of them were fun and because they followed the compromised version of the original Trek series, they almost worked as action movies. Before he died, Gene realised his vision with Star Trek The Next Generation, 7 seasons absolutely perfect Star Trek. Unfortunately the idiots at Paramount turned this into another action movie film series that have zilch to do with the natural format of the series and tried to force Data and Picard in to stupid action heroes.

And this is why the crap that JJ Abrams has made will have a short lifespan, it simply has more in common with Star Wars than Star Trek and that brain-cell challenged format grows real, tired real soon as it did with the Paramount Star Trek movies with the original crew.

They simply need to stop trying to make Star Trek movies and concentrate on developing a decent TV series again after all that DS9, Voyager and Enterprise bollocks!
cosmicstranger
cosmicstranger - 12/7/2011, 9:40 AM
I will exercise patience for the next Star Trek movie. If I can wait 18 years (Star Trek VI in 1991 to Star Trek in 2009) for a movie to look forward seeing, I can certainly wait 4 years for Star Trek 2 (2013).

The Next Generation movies, on the whole were not that great. Generations came across to me as the death of all Star Trek not just Captain Kirk. First Contact...I just CANNOT stand (action scenes looked like FPS game rip-offs, the ship self-destruction argument went on for TOO long with nothing else happening, Captain Picard clearly needs to take some logic courses, the Borg Queen died too easily and in a very anti-climatic way, etc). Insurrection was alright, but not very memorable. Nemesis had excessive plot holes and one of the worst villains in movie history.
Spock
Spock - 12/7/2011, 10:07 AM
@ Tea the theme is not outdated! Its more than relevant NOW!

You can't fault the man for having other projects, he does have to make a living. Star Trek isn't his only project. Thou Iam still very adamitted that they could of continued going foward instead of this supposed prequel.

Thou after watching Trek Nation this past week. Rod Roddenberry did wanted to do something showing Kirk & Spock during the Academy days. JJ was thrilled to see that clip Eugene showed him.
niknik
niknik - 12/7/2011, 10:13 AM
Personally, I'd much rather see a film with the Next Gen cast again. And I do agree that the one that let me down the most was Generations. Such a crappy way to kill off Kirk and even crappier way to hand off the torch to the next generation. If it would have consisited of BOTH Enterprises and their crews in a time travel story as was originally planned, it would have been epic.
niknik
niknik - 12/7/2011, 10:17 AM
Oh, and Enterprise deserved a 7 year run FAR FAR more than those pieces of crap DS9 and Voyager.
bhorwith22
bhorwith22 - 12/7/2011, 5:40 PM
Khan is NOT going to be in the next Star Trek movie.

Also, Star Trek: The Motion Picture is by far the best of the TOS films (haven't seen the TNG films yet)
bhorwith22
bhorwith22 - 12/7/2011, 5:41 PM
@Nomis Enterprise is a great show. I hope Scott Bakula, and maybe even Jolene Blalock could have cameos in the next Star Trek movie.
View Recorder