Star Wars or Star Trek? We may finally have a definitive answer

Before 2015, you could reasonably argue that Star Trek had gained the upper hand as a cultural force. Things have changed

Michael Cavna
Sunday 12 November 2017 12:16 GMT
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For four decades, “Star Trek or Star Wars?” has been one of pop culture’s most consistent binary conversation starters among nerds, right up there with “Marvel or DC?” and “CD or vinyl?”

The thing is, shortly before 2015, you could reasonably argue that Star Trek had gained the upper hand as a cultural force, thanks to J.J. Abrams’s hit reboot of the film franchise coming on top of the more recent television successes.

But now, three years after Abrams took his rebooting powers to Disney/Lucasfilm and scored huge with “The Force Awakens,” Star Wars has surged further ahead and gained a lead that now might be insurmountable for generations.

Game over, Star Wars. Thanks to Disney’s new deal, you just won.

Disney and Lucasfilm announced Thursday that they will embark on a fourth Star Wars trilogy, with “The Last Jedi” director Rian Johnson at the helm. Not only does that move plot a course for unbroken Star Wars momentum on the big screen — as creator George Lucas’s critically drubbed second trilogy disappears even further in the rearview mirror — it also sets up the perpetual relevance of Everything Else Star Wars for many years to come.

The franchise, in effect, becomes a cultural steamroller altering what millions of people — some of them not yet born — see and hear and visit.

Consider the newly announced original Star Wars TV series that Disney will feature on its entertainment streaming service, which is set to go live in 2019.

Consider, too, that come that same year, Anaheim’s Disneyland and Disney’s Hollywood Studios in Florida will open Star Wars-themed areas, as well as an “immersive” Star Wars-themed hotel at Walt Disney World that will encourage cosplay. (Even Lucas’s coming graphic-narrative museum in Southern California will be a fan destination that features Star Wars art.)

As Disney moves forward on all these fronts, it bears noting that Star Wars also appears poised to move beyond the Skywalker family line that has anchored the films for four decades, from Darth Vader through Kylo Ren. The Rian Johnson announcement signals the fourth trilogy will move beyond Lucas’s narrative DNA, perhaps shedding weighty backstory like a junked Millennium Falcon.

So where does that leave Star Trek? CBS is streaming its new “Discovery” series, so there’s a glimmer of hope there.

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Yet since Abrams left Paramount’s Star Trek franchise, it’s become a story of box-office decline. Last year’s “Star Trek Beyond” grossed $343 million worldwide — a significant dip from the previous two films, both guided by Abrams.

This, of course, is not a debate over superior philosophical storytelling or tech effects. This is a battle for mainstream cultural domination.

And as with so many things Disney these days, the commercial Force favours Star Wars for decades.

Live long and prosper, Star Trek. We need your narratives, even if they lack the cultural supremacy of multibillion-dollar trilogies.

The Washington Post

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