Fresh Prince
Superhero
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Donnerverse wans overrated and lame to begin with. But sadly thats how Superman was back then and his characters.
exactly... I mean it doesnt even make sense so the events of Superman II I guess happened in the 80s...so then Supes leaves for 5 years and suddenly we're in the new millennium. Unless we're suppose to believes the events of Superman II happened in like 01Its a francise that existed in the late 70's. Why criticize that now. They knew they should have started a brand new francise for the new millenium by starting over. Now they are stuck in mud tryin to figure out what to do. I have nothing against those Donner movies but be realistic they should not have tried to continue it 30 years later.
Singer himself acknowledged his familiarity with the comics was pretty cursory. So I kind of doubt the idea of Lex as a modern CEO was fully fleshed out between him Dougherty and Harris. The possibilities it could have presented were probably not given the time they needed to be expanded upon. Again Donner's film was a cornerstone to much of what we saw in LL in SR.
Star Trek success? Sure, to a point. Superman Returns still Outgrossed Star Trek worldwide..
Success is so relative.
SR may have out grossed trek, but I doubt it made more. I also doubt there is near the division amongst ''its'' fans, but I could be wrong.
I betcha a sequel to Trek is made before another superman film is.
Seriously GreenK, those few little paragraphs sound like they could have been so awesome.
To a point. I'd say "after-market" reaction holds more water for franchises today. Which is to refer to the anticipation level of the mainstream/geekdom, long after the movie's release hype has died down. Staying-value, I guess you would call it.
BB got it's sequel, and so will Star Trek, despite both getting less box office than SR. The more important issue, which is I think where the studios smartly gauge future projects, is the audience response. A sequel will always rest on the previous movie's success. Which is why TDK and X2 did huge compared to their predecessor. And as I'll predict, SM4 and Wolverine 2 will do worse because of the lukewarm response.
...and there's probably a dozen other posters on this board who've had much better ideas than what was in SR. And oddly (sarcasm) I don't think anyone of us would have come up with the SR storyline for a Superman film.

we are no match to singer....and there's probably a dozen other posters on this board who've had much better ideas than what was in SR. And oddly (sarcasm) I don't think anyone of us would have come up with the SR storyline for a Superman film.
Hindsight is 20/20. It's also the stuff internet movie message boards are made of - that, and wild speculation, rumors and occasional spoilers of corse.![]()
From what I understand Lex finding Kryptonian Tech and using that knowledge to start Lexcorp was in one of J.J. Abrams screenplays. The idea was right in front of them, they just decided to take the character backwards instead of moving him forward. (btw I know they didn't use the Abrams script for SR but I'm sure they were aware of it's contents)
I didn't need hindsight to tell me SR was doomed as soon as I heard about the connection to the Donner films and the kid storyline...
more people want a star trek sequel then a superman sequel.Star Trek success? Sure, to a point. Superman Returns still Outgrossed Star Trek worldwide..
Success is so relative.

if SR budget is somewhere around 220-240 millions then wouldnt this mean that the budget for ST was 100 millions?Superman Returns grossed $391 million world wide - Star Trek grossed $382 million world wide. The budget for Star Trek was 120 million dollars less than SR...it was indisputably a success. The film was extremely well recieved by critics as well as audiences. Soon the DVD will hit stores and the people who missed out in theaters will find out how good it was, which will raise anticipation for it's sequel even further. That franchise is in great shape. The Superman franchise (SR continuity at least) is not in very good shape right now to say the least...
I was asked to repost this thread here. It's sort-of a devil's advocate thing in an attempt to argue a pro-sequel argument.
If the formula to the success of 2009's Star Trek was the fact that it cut ties with the past, then why even make a Star Trek movie?
I mean, yeah yeah, things gotta evolve or die. But why couldn't it die? Why not just say, "oh well, it had a good run?"
Oh wait, maybe the name value added to the marque value. Why, though? Oh, because it was familiar to people.
And even if it had to have the Star Trek name, it didn't have to be Kirk, Spock, McCoy, etc. I mean, the second Star Trek: the Next Generation film, Star Trek: First Contact was a sizable hit and so why not just make another spin-off?
...
Maybe the problem wasn't that it was too stagnant. Maybe it was that there was no other way to go. Maybe it was time for a back-to-basics approach.
"Oh, but it established a new continuity." True... well, sort-of. It certainly did so, but they didn't just say, "those movies never happened," but much like with Crisis on Infinite Earths, it was still rooted in the timeline of the original, PLUS what else could they do? If they wanted Spock and Kirk, they had to go to the past, but if they did so, it would bind them with the events of the original series.
Okay, but why not get a new actor to play Old Spock? Why Leonard Nimoy? Oh, because he's an awesome actor and popular in fan groups.
But why so many homages? Well, everyone knows the "I'm a doctor, not a..." quip and because some fans like homages to more esoteric stuff like, "you are my superior officer, you are also my friend. I have been and always will be yours."
Gee. It's almost like this WAS my father's Star Trek and if there wasn't, there wouldn't be a point in making it.