It is what Patrick Stewart wanted, which goes to show that sometimes the actor isn’t always right.
haverholm@kbin.earth 1 day ago It was always weird to me that, after 7 years playing Picard, as soon as they started making movies, Patrick Stewart's instinct was to play him as an action hero 🤦
All of that beach buggy stunt driving in Nemesis should have gone on the editing floor.
HobbitFoot@thelemmy.club 1 day ago
wjrii@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Patrick Stewart was also deeply involved in the creative decisions on Picard seasons 1 and 2. He got to the point where he just wanted to do what he wanted to do, and since he is Jean-Luc Picard, what he wants is ipso facto the right choice:
Sometimes you do not want your actor actually in charge of their iconic character, and genuine embrace of it can manage to make it worse if they’re not writers. I will do my occasional hornet’s-nest kicking and say that Mark Hamill’s take on Luke Skywalker after filming The Last Jedi was similarly myopic, but in a direction that more fans at least think they wanted, and since we’ll never see his choices play out he still gets the benefit of the doubt.
psycotica0@lemmy.ca 22 hours ago
Grail@multiverse.soulism.net 18 hours ago
Hahahahaha!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fg_cwI1Xj4M
cuchi@startrek.website 7 hours ago
I need the context of this clip, is from a comedy? This was scripted or Patrick Stewart improvised that scene?
Rakonat@lemmy.world 14 hours ago
I think the big issue there was Kurtzman talked to Stewart long before any deals were signed that set up what they were doing. But Stewart hadn’t played the character in 15 years and then not a proper portrayal of Picard since 94 when the TV series ended.
Without Kurtz awful retelling of Star Trek, along with it being fairly apparent to me he didn’t want to do Star Trek but something else entirely every time he’s helmed a project but can only get green lit by paramount when he slaps the Star Trek paint on it. And the projects he’s less involved with (like season 3) are the best received.