Knee-deep in the muck. Filmmaker, Director of Production for The Collectivist, and New Cinema Club czar.

lemmygrad account

linktr.ee/tymonbrown

  • 5 Posts
  • 17 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: June 24th, 2023

help-circle







  • As a purist, I’d say watch them all and in release order, but if you really have to be choosy with your time, here’s a list of things you can skip (in my opinion):

    • Star Trek Into Darkness
    • Discovery (whole show)
    • Picard S1 and S2
    • Short Treks

    I know suggesting skipping Discovery outright is going to be seen as… extreme, but I suggest doing so only if time is a crucial factor. It’s a dizzyingly uneven show with the lowest points of quality in all of Trek. However, it also has some incredible highs and some truly great characters, so if you find the time to watch it, you should. And I know I’m in the minority on this, but I found Short Treks to be unwatchable.

    On the flip side, Lower Decks is incredible, and Strange New Worlds is good. The third season of Picard is excellent. Prodigy is a little weird but it’s got a lot of strength. Star Trek Beyond is also a surprisingly good movie.












  • I’d love it if this were true, and sure, only time will tell - but I have very little faith that Paramount will be able to weather the next two or three years of industry shakeup.

    With the WGA and SAG strikes (which I fully support) stopping all production, as well as Zaslav turning streaming into a killing ground, AND the looming threat of a Netflix acquisition or merger, Paramount isn’t in a good position to maintain a corrected course. Their market cap is alarmingly weak compared to their competition, and they haven’t even been able to fully coalesce all ST content under their own platform.

    The only way Star Trek is going to survive, much less thrive, is if those in charge do a solid return to form; Star Trek needs to be less expensive and more subtle. Chris Pine hit the nail on the head recently when he called out Paramount’s stubborn desire to compete with Marvel, Star Wars, et al:

    "We always tried to get the huge international market [with ‘Star Trek.’] It was always about making the billion dollars. It was always this billion-dollar mark because Marvel was making a billion. Billion, billion, billion.

    We struggled with it because ‘Star Trek,’ for whatever reason, its core audience is rabid. Like rabid, as you know. To get these people that are interested that maybe are ‘Star Wars’ fans or think ‘Star Trek’ is not cool or whatever, proven to be … we’ve definitely done a good job of it but not the billion-dollar kind of job that they want.

    I’ve always thought that ‘Star Trek’ should operate in the zone that is smaller. You know, it’s not a Marvel appeal. It’s like, let’s make the movie for the people that love this group of people, that love this story, that love ‘Star Trek.’ Let’s make it for them and then, if people want to come to the party, great. But make it for a price and make it, so that if it makes a half-billion dollars, that’s really good."