Have money woes between Paramount and CBS doomed J.J. Abrams future involvement with Star Trek?

JoBloJoBlo
Last Updated on August 2, 2021

We have all heard that J.J. Abrams could not pass up the opportunity to direct STAR WARS: EPISODE VII despite originally declining the offer due to his commitment to STAR TREK. With STAR TREK INTO DARKNESS now hitting theaters and the possibility of Abrams directing the sequel to STAR TREK INTO DARKNESS in doubt, we may now be getting the real reason why things have ended up the way they have.

According to The Wrap, Abrams became frustrated at not being able to develop STAR TREK television series to further the plots and characters that just didn’t fit into the feature films, something that Disney and Lucasfilm are planning for STAR WARS.

CBS and Paramount were both owned by Viacom until 2006 when CBS left the parent company. Paramount retained rights to features while CBS kept the rights to television series. CBS has continued to market Original Series memorabilia which has caused major issues between CBS, Paramount, and Bad Robot. A source told The Wrap this:

“J.J. just threw up his hands. The message was, ‘Why set up all this when we’ll just be competing against ourselves?’ The studio wanted to please Bad Robot, but it was allowing CBS to say yay or nay when it came to what was happening with the ‘Star Trek’ products.”

STAR TREK has always been a niche franchise that finally opened up to a larger fanbase with Abrams reboot in 2009. Since then, Bad Robot has built up major buzz for STAR TREK INTO DARKNESS, but we have not seen a television series since the cancellation of STAR TREK: ENTERPRISE. Bryan Singer and Brian Fuller both had ideas for very unique series that never came to fruition, but you can imagine what J.J. Abrams has been pondering all these years since reinventing the story of Kirk and crew.

While we may never hear this as the official reason why J.J. went from TREK to WARS, it does seem to make sense. As a fan of both series, this makes me both happy and sad. Either way, we are getting more from both series and that is a good thing.

Source: The Wrap

About the Author

TV Critic / Columnist
6,321 Articles Published Started writing in 2012

Favorite Movies: Being There, The Shining, The Royal Tenenbaums, Suspiria, Seven, North By read more Northwest, Citizen Kane, The Monster Squad, Begotten, Fight Club, Monty Python and the Holy Grail, Army of Darkness, Children of Men, Blade Runner, The Big Lebowski, Casino, Pi, Dumb and Dumber, The 400 Blows, Small Change, Bonnie & Clyde, Cool Hand Luke, Moulin Rouge, Gangs of New York, Shallow Grave, The Rock, The Incredibles, Who Framed Roger Rabbit?, The Gate, Prince of Darkness, Oldboy, The Dark Knight, The Lord of the Rings, The Tree of Life, The Exorcist III, Midnight Special

Likes: To piss you off, unpopular opinions, the novels of Stephen King, read more obscure bands that even hipsters dont know, things that go boom, Reeses Pieces, Cate Blanchett, reading paper books, watching people falling down, a good jump scare, listening to a full album in one sitting, rooting for the underdog, red band trailers, rare steaks, cool beer labels, smooth whisky, properly proportioned image files, top ten lists, VHS tapes, and actually scary movies

The comment section exists to allow readers to discuss the article constructively and respectfully, focused on the topic at hand.

What’s Not Allowed

  • Abusive language, insults, or harassment toward other users or staff.
  • Hate speech of any kind is strictly prohibited.
  • Bickering, bullying, personal attacks, or baiting others to argue
  • Extended off-topic debates, especially those centered on politics or religion rather than the article topic
  • No AI content or SPAM