posted
Well, he's right on a superficial level. The fans did want a movie about the Romulans, they did want to know what Remus was all about, they did want to see the Enterprise get into a real "Wrath of Khan" type fight, they wanted to see what Federation ground vehicles looked like and they wanted to see Riker & Troi get on with it.
Now I'm not saying that all fans wanted all of these things, but I think it's safe to say that most fans wanted most of those things.
They just didn't like HOW those things were executed.
posted
How many times have people complained about 'fans' and their 'fan-wankedness'... ships bristling with 100's of weapons. There is a difference between creating something that would be appealing to real fans (things like that are nice injokes and tie-ins into continuity) and pandering to what they 'THINK' fans like. I agree with your last sentence (well I agree with your whole post) but it was the execution of the project that was crap and to turn around as I've heard Patrick Stewart and now Brent Spiner do - to say "oh well the fans didn't like it - it was the fan's fault for not coming" etc. is just lame. Take a bit of responsibility.
-------------------- "Bears. Beets. Battlestar Galactica." - Jim Halpert. (The Office)
posted
What I wanted to see waaaayyyy back when Generations was announced was a movie depicting Picard retiring from Starfleet (or at least taking a sabbatical) and becoming an ambassador, Riker receiving command of the Enterprise and their first mission was taking Picard to his new assignment.
Yes, for a long, long time I've wanted more Romulan development. We're so comfortable with Klingons that some fans would be happy with a Klingon based series, yet we still know relatively little about the Romulans.
Ground vehicles? Well, I would like to see other aspects of 24th century life than what is around Starfleet. If that counts as ground vehicles, then OK.
But yes, I don't think I wanted to see all of these in the same movie.
ST:TWOK was a great movie. It's one thing to have another movie with a great starship duel and quite another to try to overkill the emulation of the earlier film.
posted
Well I for one think the ship battles in Nemesis were very well executed, and the ramming was more than I would've hoped for.
The movie introduced also a number of new ideas in Trek universe; the Enterprise being fully visible as it goes into warp, the phasers being able to pan their target while firing, resulting in a spray-like effect not unlike that of a swivel-firing vulcan cannon.
The only reason that starfleet people in TNG never waved their phasers while firing was of course due to the difficulty of adding the post-production effect, with the exception of that morphing monster Geordi shot in his quarters with his bedside phaser in season 6 iirc, he shot as he was dropping to the ground, resulting in a short but definitely curved firing arc.
Registered: Aug 1999
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posted
My main issue with Nemesis was that none of the characters sounded quite right. That does a lot to kill anything Trek for me. I've enumerated on here enough times what my problems were with Nemesis, I don't think I need to repeat them. Just do a search for "Nemesis" and my screen-name. *heh*
--Jonah
-------------------- "That's what I like about these high school girls, I keep getting older, they stay the same age."
--David "Woody" Wooderson, Dazed and Confused
Registered: Feb 2001
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posted
I've always like Brent Spiner and Data was probably my favourite TNG character, but he clearly doesn't have a clue what he's talking about. He says he realised it was time to stop playing Data because he was too old and that makes a lot of sense, so why, for all intents and purposes did he(as co-writer or whatever he was) bring the character back from the dead in the last few minutes? That completely contradicts what he says in the article and made the movie totally pointless. You expect the reset button to come into play in a tv series, but not in a movie which is allegedly the final outing for a group of characters.
"How many times have people complained about 'fans' and their 'fan-wankedness'... ships bristling with 100's of weapons. There is a difference between creating something that would be appealing to real fans (things like that are nice injokes and tie-ins into continuity) and pandering to what they 'THINK' fans like."
Or, to put it another way, they may have missed the difference between "fan" and "fanboy".
Registered: Mar 1999
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quote:Originally posted by Nim: Well I for one think the ship battles in Nemesis were very well executed, and the ramming was more than I would've hoped for.
Oh it was nice, shame they revealed all the movie's secrets in the PREVIEW thought!!
-------------------- "Bears. Beets. Battlestar Galactica." - Jim Halpert. (The Office)
posted
I agree, there was just too much over the top weaponry in the ship, but the movie did seem a little desperate if I may say so myself.
-------------------- errrr...
Registered: Jan 2007
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WizArtist II
"How can you have a yellow alert in Spacedock? "
Member # 1425
posted
I couldn't help but think the Scimitar was SUPPOSED to be in Andromeda not Trek. I thought the whole Dune-Buggy-Trek was retarded and while the ramming bit was well executed, the two new Rommies went down way too quickly and I never really had a feeling the "E" was in danger.
-------------------- There are 10 types of people in the world...those that understand Binary and those that don't.
Registered: Nov 2004
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posted
I was inclined to agree that Spiner is an idiot who either doesn't know what the fans are talking about all the time or who has a total misconception of how the movie really wound up.
quote:Originally posted by Reverend: Well, he's right on a superficial level. The fans did want a movie about the Romulans, they did want to know what Remus was all about, they did want to see the Enterprise get into a real "Wrath of Khan" type fight, they wanted to see what Federation ground vehicles looked like and they wanted to see Riker & Troi get on with it.
But this is something that I didn't consider so far. Because "Romulans", "Wrath of Khan" or "Riker & Troi" are typical favorites in polls, rather than "continuity". So to someone who just pays attention to coarse and not necessarily representative statistics, Nemesis was exactly the logical film to make. Only that even if we forgive the trivial premise it was poorly executed.
-------------------- Bernd Schneider
Registered: Mar 1999
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