Showing posts with label st2009. Show all posts
Showing posts with label st2009. Show all posts

Sunday, March 14, 2010

BLTN* Dept: Scott's starry night


*Better Late Than Never, of course...

Our old Beatles-loving, not-so-closet Trekkie buddy Scott Mantz, who now shines among the stars as the "MovieMantz" reviewer for Access Hollywood, had an infamous geekout with Pine & Quinto during his premiere coverage of JJ's ST 2009 ... and so when the pre-Oscar awards geared up later, the boys really rewarded him for it one night at the Critic's Choice Movie Awards.

If you didn't catch it, he blogs all about it with a MovieMantz Rantz--plus check the vidclip recap there of the sit-down that started it all.

A don't-miss—even now!

We love ya, Scott! Say hello to Sir Paul for us...

Thursday, December 3, 2009

LA ALERT!: Big screening, little screening for Trek movie(s) this weekend

If you're in SoCal this weekend and have room for one more look at Star Trek 2009 (and who doesn't?):

--You can catch it no-frills and free Saturday, Dec. 12 at 1:30 p.m. at the North Hollywood Regional Library, 5211 Tujunga Ave., North Hollywood CA 91601-3119 ... (818) 766-7185. The USS Angeles local Starfleet chapter is acting as host with door prizes, refreshments and a little Q&A prior.

—Or if you'd care for a bigger splash, JJTrek opens a double-bill in a special two-day Trek film event at 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday at Santa Monica's historic Aero Theater, sponsored by American Cinematheque, Geek Monthly and trekmovie.com. PineKirk & Co. open things on screen Friday, followed by Marc Altman and Robert Meyer Burnett's 10th anniversary screening of their affectionate Trek homage, Free Enterprise—complete with their cast-crew reunion and panel afterwards. Saturday brings The Film Trilogy—Treks II, III and IV—with a special Q&A session with writer-director Nick Meyer.

So, set sail and take your pick; no 3-D glasses required. 2012, of course, could be a different story...

Saturday, September 19, 2009

Grand Slam & cast reality: it's a movie world

Almost let this get by, but Creation's recent regretful announcement postponing of the Trek side of its planned new "Grand Slam" show move to November due to a lack of ST '09 cast coming aboard was ... well... too bad, but not totally unexpected.

Kudos for Creation for trying for an event that would make sense after a blockbuster June opening, of course.

But as we wondered aloud a year ago—a movie-only franchise cast is different than a TV franchise cast:
... For now, anyway, while you’ll see their beaming faces all over at promo time next May, I’m betting they’ll be absent from standard convention slots fans are so accustomed to. They will likely love this movie—and the next ones—and their fans, and what they do for their careers… But as film actors they will likely be out doing just that, trekking the studio/meeting circuit, rather than the con circuit.
I’m just sayin.’

Zack Quinto had a bit o' fan background, and had his Heroes genre experience going in; he's been a Vegas visitor more than once. Give the rest of 'em time. Meanwhile, Adam and Gary, we still think a fall L.A. media con is still a great idea, down the road.

Monday, August 10, 2009

Vegas: First thoughts

Quick thoughts from a Vegas survivor: If you didn't laugh at Trek's many doomsday death notices back in 2005, you can safely chortle and guffaw now.

Fully half of the steady-to-higher turnout at Creation's annual Vegas shindig were either first-timers or those coming back to the fold after 15 or 20 years. And this with no ST: The Experience to visit at the Hilton... or anywhere ... yet. I heard it over and over again from the folks who stopped by my table—many of them true stereotype-busters. I even saw an honest-to-goodness Barbie-and-Ken who'd be totally out of place if not for their wide-eyed stares as they paced the dealer's room—and they were on Day 2 of their honeymoon!: he the armchair fan who stumbled into the con with no advance idea, she the patient one who "gave him one day" to indulge.

Credit J.J.'s Star Trek '09, of course, and the energizing new green blood it pumped into not just fans but mainstream media and public perceptions.

More proof: The "side room" at Vegas notoriously draws maybe 30 or so fans between all the bigger events elsewhere; this year, a thrown-together panel on the new movie I co-guested with Anthony Pascale of trekmovie.com and host Doug Murray had 300+ ... who were, by shows of hands, a room HALF-full of first-time Vegas attendees, about HALF-full of first-time con attendees anywhere, and somewhat less half a room of completely new fans brought in by the movie.

And not just questions, but testimonials. From adult NEW fans who say they've gone to check out the TOS DVDs, or even moved on to TNG and later shows. From preteens who, somewhat stillin shock, said they are no longer the "outcast Trekkies" of their class but the "cool kid" with all the info on teh hot new summer movie.

My friend Dr. David Williams even reports the same for his real science visual talks on the NASA science missions he works on: 300 for Friday, 150+ Saturday, from the routine 30 or so. Even the larrynemecek.com --AKA "startrek.com Memorial"--trivia quiz Sunday morning had 50-60 in line and 150+ in the seats for over an hour...

As I said at the panel—this is music to a lot of folks' ears. Pointed or otherwise.

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Two words in the same sentence: 'country' and 'Trek'?



Can this year get any stranger, er, better?

A Newsweek cover is nothin'... but now we have STAR TREK on the opening of Tuesday's Country Music Association awards, fer Prophets' sake? When did THOSE two ever entities ever share a stage together? (OK, well, there was the Brad Paisley/Shat hookup a few years ago... sorta.)

This has to be a good thing, Miri. Cute, well-done, and as broad-based in appeal as the movie itself. Another marketing masterpiece. (And this one doesn't have to worry about heart, canon, breweries, ship sizes, etc.)

Direct link for the video-challenged is here.

Friday, June 5, 2009

Prime importance


Base! Dibs! I’m gettin’ this on the record first!

Actually, it’s a good thing I’m not a cynic, or else I’d already be out there making the point that Leonard’s role in ST ’09 was specifically called “Spock PRIME” … meaning that he existed in the Prime Timeline … or perhaps, more exactly, the “Primetime Line.” Meaning… anything else was not ready for Prime Time?

Or implying, by process of deduction, that anything else actually comes from the Sub-Prime Timeline?

Well, we all know just how much trouble the Sub-Primes have caused lately …

(Baddump-bump)

Sunday, May 17, 2009

LA ALERT: See ST writers Bob Orci and Alex Kurtzman May 26

In the same vein as Ron Moore's evening earlier this month ... a laid-back but smashing event that we expect again:

The Writers Guild Foundation presents
An Evening with
ALEX KURTZMAN &
ROBERTO ORCI

Star Trek, Transformers

Tuesday, May 26 -- 7:30-9:30pm -- At the WG Theater

Join us for this rare interview with one of the most successful sci-fi/action writing-producing teams in the business, moderated by Academy-nominated writer Paul Attanasio.

Tickets: https://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/63483
Or call 800-838-3006

The event is at the Writers Guild Theater, 135 S Doheny Dr, 90211, and includes a Q&A and a light reception afterward. More info: www.WGFoundation.org

No. 2 and proud of it



Mid-weekend, the box office is coming in and ballyhooed Angels and Demons is "only" beating Star Trek by a estimated domestic BO if $48 million to $43 million!

Look out, world—I think these kids can steer!

Friday, May 8, 2009

Finally--BK has a winner... with Trek?


The last few years, Burger King's corporate identity has been a bit murky and fuzzy, with those horribly spooky Burger King plasto-mask characters not offering much. They conjur up the shakes, all right—but not of the dairy variety. And that's apparently what corporate BK wants. (And I say this as a fan of the menu...)

But maybe there's a positive ending here—and on two fronts.

JJ had to delete his Klingon scene—but could the movie's loss be BK's gain? This is a LOT of marketing moxie put out for just a single movie ... and did you catch the KING-ons at the Grauman's Hollywood premiere May 30?

Oh—that redshirt (who survives!) ought to do conventions... if BK hasn't thought of that already...

Monday, May 4, 2009

Two words

They had me at "my ex-wife."







Still, as Data would say, I'm "Processing... processing..."

More later.

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Newsweek cover goes Trek—again, after 23 years

What is it about Newsweek that it gets to play proclaimer of Trek's mainstreaminess? Back in 1986, with a hit Star Trek movie and an all-new generation TV show in the works from Paramount, Newsweek gave over a whole cover to sum up why Gene's baby was suddenly mainstream on its 20th birthday.




And now, after ANOTHER 20+3 years, have things come full circle? Newsweek does it again, feeling the need to announce how things have come home—afte the boom-and-bust since then, and back to the future in mainstream:









We’re All Trekkies Now

'Star Trek' is way cool. How'd that happen? Because the geeks have inherited the earth, and the White House. ...

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Trek's future: The big question

We touched on this before, but it's what on my mind now as we count down to JJ Trek.

There's less than a month to go and everyone around the world is excited, thanks to the global PR caravan ... and it looks more and more that this film and its *alleged* alternate timeline will blow people away.

But a lot of us are wondering what it will mean for Star Trek and our beloved franchise in the long term... what any single movie can do.

A boffo box office will sure give a shot in the arm to the franchise "vibe" in a general way, and shoot down the Trek naysayers who believed all those "dead franchise" headlines in 2005. That's truly important after all the "franchise fatigue" nonsense put out there when Enterprise was cancelled. But can it alone truly restore the froth, the numbers? Or will it take Star Trek's return to weekly television?

It's all about gaining newbies, a new generation of teens or at least the Millenials/Gen Y & Z bunch/ This movie, well-made, is in essence one big chance to throw it all against the wall and see what sticks. That's what so many of us are waiting to see: will ticket buyers remain just happy summer-action-flick-goers, or will they actually translate into new long-term fans in some way?

Let's check back after summer conventions, DVD release time and holiday shopping season and find out.

Monday, April 13, 2009

Drip by drip—NOT

You'd think the single biggest clambake in recent Trekland history would be all over my blog—every single day. Don't worry--it will be here, but ...

As I said when we launched this enterprise, I was not into the "drip-drip-drip" of daily news pings. That's not what TREKLAND and the site are about. For one thing, this is a movie that's been in the works for three years, actually, and the daily (and overlapping) newsblast is all about just the same two hours of film. That worldwide press caravan—designed for each country's consumption and attention—is a damn smart project, stirring up Trek in the public eye nation by nation, especially in low-Trek markets where it's hardly taken for granted.

But there's a zillion sites where you can get all that. Here, it's all in the family—and hopefully either my POV or that of the people who stop by isn't so common, but no less interesting or insightful.

But we're hardly ingoring JJTrek. Nosiree. Stay tuned.

Monday, March 2, 2009

Cool con news—and one more change

Five or six years ago, Comic-Con San Diego was almost totally off the Star Trek radar, as was its New York cousin. Even a couple years ago, the "mid-year" WonderCon in the Bay Area by the same folks was much the same: whaaaat?

All that is changed now. The drip-drip-drip news of details and the packed audiences for JJ Abrams' movie advance vanguard at WonderCon last weekend is merely the crest of the overall Hollywood tidal wave that now crashes into these multi-genre conventions and threatens to send their attendance numbers to flood stage. Especially at Comic-Con, where both hotel rooms and panel seating is as scarce as an albino Orion.

What of the traditional fan cons, especially the Star Trek variety, fan and pro? It's obvious that JJ's team comes from the current TV-movie crop of producers who have risen to the heights knowing chiefly the last decade's bi-coastal Comic-Cons— and now WonderCon—as a great way to reach the hard-core faithful and make a big media splash at the same time. The genre, online and geek press, plus the "fringe" of mainstream media, have grown well-equipped to be familiar with those venues and their across-the-board star power moreso than traditional fan cons. (And yes, I know full well that the Comic-Cons and WonderCon sprang full-bore as fan cons and technically still are ... and Atlanta's Dragon*Con is not far behind. It's the obvious beacon to reach the Southern audience. with skyrocketing and crammed attendance numbers of its own.)

For a lot of people, this is not your father's fandom, much less franchise. And the ripple effects are still shaking out, for good and bad. Are we in a transition time for fandom —online geeks versus their elders, a potential two-track population—as much as for the Twitterati versus those still just happy to be emailing in our overall culture?

Comments, anyone?
Stay tuned in any case—and more here on that ripple effect, later ...

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Assured Esurance: Where No Marketing Has Gone Before

Wow.

I just heard the Esurance "Biggest Trekkie" partner promotion advertised on my INTERNET SWING RADIO STATION. Now that's crossing over your demo lines!

Nothing like it since The Motion Picture.

Paramount is promoting the hell out of this sucker. We already know JJ's bunch have delivered a winner, so the biggest jaw-dropper of all may be the marketing penetration and the licensed goodies.

"Erin's Mission to Delta Vega"! Geez. Brilliant joining of the now-mainstream anime aesthetic with Trekland. We'll be waiting ...

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Trek/Wars Goof: Part 4,747, 047

Hey, let's all take it easy on Bishop T.D. Jakes and his very public flub Tuesday in mixing up Star Trek and Star Wars this week amid all the Inauguration hoopla. The flip came with his use of "May the Force be with you," rather than Scripture, to broaden the age demos in his call to urge President Obama to action—all as Inauguration Day Prayer Service keynoter.

He's hardly the first to ever do it. Remember Anderson Cooper on CNN? (Apparently, neither AC nor Will.I.Am ever saw DS9's "Dr. Bashir, I Presume?," etc.)

Secondly, the bishop must be a great dad—his kid Dexter corrected him immediately!

Most of all—lookit how it got Trekland (and Lucasworld) into the national headlines? Far more than had Jakes just blandly gotten it right. Tons of media outlets and digests picked up the original Dallas Morning News story and ran it.

In fact—how do we know this really wasn't all just part of JJ's masterful viral campaign? Piggybacking the week's Obamapalooza? Hmmmm...

Monday, January 19, 2009

TV vs. Movie: Think about this

On the heels of my last musings about What Hath ST2009 Wrought... or will ... I thought I better get on the record with this now.

I've said it before and I'll be saying it again:

By any measure, whether this movie sinks or soars—and I'm betting on the latter!—I'm wondering when everyone will wake up and realize it is JUST a movie.

I don't mean the quality ... I mean the fact that's it just two hours of film. Taking two years to produce. And it's another two-year wait for just another two hours.

If this is the safest way back to public respect for Star Trek by the all-knowing mainstream media and the all-funding studio investors, then so be it.

But Star Trek will never again be how we now think and remember it—the fandom, the escalating excitement, the onrush of cool factor—until it returns to television. Not until we return to the days when there's one weekly adventure after another being constantly cranked out, not matter what the format or era or character set (assumig it's top-notch, of course) will we really return to the heady days of the '90s and early Aughts.

We need characters evolving, gadgets a-gleaming and canon deepening more than just two hours every two years.

Sometime around May 15 or 20, a week or two after this movie opens to roaring success, everyone will wake up and suddenly remember that fact.

Sunday, November 16, 2008

And WHY is it a record?







From Variety:

In a historic victory for a film franchise that's nearly half a century old, Sony/MGM's "Quantum of Solace" secured the biggest domestic opening ever for a Bond pic, grossing an estimated $70.4 million from 3,451 runs--74% more than "Casino Royale."
Previous record-holder for best Bond opening was "Die Another Day" ($47 million).

Not even mentioned, however, is how much of that Bond B.O. is due to the tickets bought by Trekfen dying to see their new trailer .... !!

Saturday, November 15, 2008

STV: "Goggle Guy" Meets the Fans



Six months after we first met him as our very first vlog, "rookie" Trekland resident Anthony Vitale—the ubiquitous "Goggle Guy" welder of the ST film teaser trailer— is all grown up and surviving his first real meeting with fans: the annual and infamous Las Vegas Creation convention.

As we get back to our backlog of interviews, we are reminded that it's not often you can catch a Trek vet's first outing like this...low-key or otherwise...

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

We've Never Gone This Way Before

A whole new cast in the glare of the spotlight. Hollywood veterans. For a movie. Months in the making and countdown.

When you think about it, after 43 years of viewable Star Trek productions, we’re now in a place Where No One Has Gone Before.

Sure, Trek's certainly had its share of movies, new series casts and first-time producers. But I’m wondering what the “morning after” for this mix will be like, no matter how great the performance—and I don’t think most fans or industry watchers are following through that far.

First up, let's be straight: Like most every other watcher by now, I’m pretty convinced JJ’s new movie will pack a wallop, both with the box office and mainstream pop culture—and most hard-cores fans will be along for the ride.

But consider: All prior Trek movies have been “icing on the cake” for a TV show cast that earned them—both original and TNG. For good or bad, all the films to date have been adventures in search of achieving a big-screen bang with characters and actors we already knew. Almost no exposition—visual or verbal—was ever required.

This time, it’s a whole new ball game. Sure, we know the characters—unless the mostly confirmed plot format alters even that, and we only mostly know them. But for the new actors playing those old roles, well … let’s say I was curious when J.J.’s casting news dribbled out. Sure enough, his actors went of a true feature film line-up, not those open to a TV run follow-up.

Now consider II: For the most part, there is and was no established “Star Trek HQ” of creative staff and support folks yielding up this work. For the first time since Harve Bennett’s pre-TNG films, Star Trek ‘09 is proceeding like any other nomadic movie crew: certain departments are hired up and show up on-lot as needed, and then go away again, as needed. As is the nature of the biz, they close up shop and go on to the next project—cast and crew alike. The ongoing honchos involved don’t even all office at Paramount.

So, come 2009 and there will again be no full-time Star Trek “presence” at Paramount, save someone in Home Entertainment—with even Bad Robot concerned with a host of other projects too. No still-standing sets or offices to tour through or sneak peeks at.

Most of all, these actors will not have to depend on these roles—and they certainly aren’t in the middle of a seven-year TV run to promote. For now, anyway, while you’ll see their beaming faces all over at promo time next May, I’m betting they’ll be absent from standard convention slots fans are so accustomed to. They will likely love this movie—and the next ones—and their fans, and what they do for their careers… But as film actors they will likely be out doing just that, trekking the studio-meeting circuit rather than the con circuit.

I’m just sayin.’