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By Joshua Tyler
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Everyone talks about Star Trek again. Unfortunately, they talk about it in the context of the franchise dead.
If you want to blame his death on someone, you should probably put it on Alex Kurtzman. He has been in the care of the franchise since 2009’s Trek Star. He is also a newly released paramount +’s producer Trek Star: Section 31A straight movie to stream so bad that 58% of Star Trek fans responded to our vote to vote to insist that Paramount deletes the film from the internet.
So what happened? What does Alex Kurtzman have to say for himself? His response, in brief, is: Star Trek is a safe space, so it’s okay to make a terrible movie.
Is my concentration over? This is the exact quote from his interview with Trekmovie, where they asked him what he would tell fans worried about section 31.
“I think you tend to find Star Trek because you feel somehow so you don’t fit in, right? And Star Trek becomes a safe place that tells you it’s right to be different. It’s okay to be a misstatement. And this is a movie about Misfits, right? “
Following that horrific quote, he launched into a wandering word salad for “defending our freedom,” and then sank even lower. He tried to argue that the best way to defend Gene Godenberry from a bright future is to make films about horrific people doing horrific things.
Here’s Kurtzman:
“So ultimately, I feel like what we say is, for the sake of starfleet and that beautiful vision that godenberry of this optimistic utopia had, so that vision may exist , For the light to exist, you need people you act in the shadows. And it’s yin and yang. You can’t get one without the other. “
At the head of Alex Kurtzman, there is no such thing as a bright and happy future for humanity because you can only get it balanced by something terrible. At Star Trek Alex Kurtzman, Gene Godenberry’s dream cannot exist.
He then went on to seek a paper for his failures by wrapping himself in LGBTQ+iconography, saying of his terrible film, “And in that way, I think it’s just another color in Rainbow Star Trek.”
In my 0-star review of Star Trek: Section 31, I asked if it was possible for a film to be fundamentally bad. Now Star Trek fans have a solution. If you are looking for bad, look no further than Alex Kurtzman.