• Never Surrender: A Galaxy Quest Documentary (2019)

    From Adam H. Kerman@21:1/5 to All on Wed Apr 9 15:02:09 2025
    I foumd this documentary as a new release at the library. It must have
    been remastered. IMDb trivia said there were sound problems when first released, confirmed by user reviews, that the production team had left
    the project and post production was rushed. Somebody must have spent
    money to fix this as there were no sound problems.

    It's so meta, your mind will be blown. After all, Galaxy Quest (1999)
    was the ultimate fan experience. The Thermians were the ultimate fans of
    the old tv series within the movie amd stsructured their society based
    on the "historical documents" received from Hollywood. The nerdiest of
    the nerds get to help save the day based on their unlimited knowledge of trivia, and ultimately, the movie itself was meant to be enjoyed by
    audiences young and old who enjoyed good science fiction television.

    And this documentary celebrates the fans who love the movie for its
    celebration of fandom!

    There were clips from interviews with the director and writer, and
    interviews with the casting director and producers. The documentary
    credits one of the producers -- Mark Johnson -- as being more critical
    to putting the right team of people together behind the camera the
    executive producer.

    There was more discussion of Harold Ramis as director until Tim Allen
    was cast, who was chosen by Jeffrey Katzenberg to exploit his Home
    Improvement popularity. Ramis didn't want to work with a comedian
    although Groundhog Day was brilliant) as he felt that he was the wrong
    director for Robin Williams in Club Paradize (1986).

    Robert Gordon, the final screenwriter, was hired because producers
    didn't like earlier scripts which emphasized the dichotomy between the
    Jason character and performing Captain Taggert. Instead, Gordon made
    Jason more of an egoist, playing Taggert was the highlight of his
    career, who relished the attention. Because of this, Gordon wasn't shown earlier scripts. Also, Gordon set the main action of the movie in space
    rather than on Earth.

    Everybody had nice things to say about Alan Rickman, who, despite being
    a serious dramatic actor, had a great sense of humor, thought the script
    was funny and wanted the role. He didn't appreciate Tim Allen clowning
    around before the takes would start but came to accept him. He made fun
    of Allen, who was forced to act in the scene in wh8ch Mathesar (Enrico Colantoni) is tortured, revealing the nature of fiction and storytelling
    to the childlike alien. After a number of different takes, Allen was
    upset that he didn't like the emotions he was feeling. Rickman
    sardonically observed that Allen had just experienced acting.

    The fans they chose to interview were wonderful, truly working on their costumes and doing a nice job performing Thermians. I didn't see anybody dressed as the enemy reptile.

    I'm going to defend the studio's insistence that the movie be less dark
    and edited to be released as a family movie. Truly, this movie should
    have been seen by parents with their kids. Apparently there was a lot of swearing initially. It's better as a PG movie. But the obvious loop of
    Gwen swearing about the chompers made for a great sight gag.

    What the studio did wrong, of course, was marketing the movie to
    children to compete for the audience of the Rugrats movie, instead of
    marketing it as a family movie. It never found its audience upon initial release.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From shawn@21:1/5 to ahk@chinet.com on Wed Apr 9 11:28:20 2025
    On Wed, 9 Apr 2025 15:02:09 -0000 (UTC), "Adam H. Kerman"
    <ahk@chinet.com> wrote:

    I foumd this documentary as a new release at the library. It must have
    been remastered. IMDb trivia said there were sound problems when first >released, confirmed by user reviews, that the production team had left
    the project and post production was rushed. Somebody must have spent
    money to fix this as there were no sound problems.


    Never Surrender: A Galaxy Quest Documentary - Official Trailer https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=39cVvN28UXE


    Galaxy Quest Documentary | Never Surrender Trailer #2 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jBZk6NvHKMg



    Another coverage of the movie.

    Galaxy Quest: You've Never Heard it Told Like This Before! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xQLQ4XO-WUM



    and the actual video is available for rent:

    Never Surrender: A Galaxy Quest Documentary https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=djgJCQFHMWI


    It's so meta, your mind will be blown. After all, Galaxy Quest (1999)
    was the ultimate fan experience. The Thermians were the ultimate fans of
    the old tv series within the movie amd stsructured their society based
    on the "historical documents" received from Hollywood. The nerdiest of
    the nerds get to help save the day based on their unlimited knowledge of >trivia, and ultimately, the movie itself was meant to be enjoyed by
    audiences young and old who enjoyed good science fiction television.

    Such a good movie.. I've seen it multiple times.
    And this documentary celebrates the fans who love the movie for its >celebration of fandom!

    There were clips from interviews with the director and writer, and
    interviews with the casting director and producers. The documentary
    credits one of the producers -- Mark Johnson -- as being more critical
    to putting the right team of people together behind the camera the
    executive producer.

    There was more discussion of Harold Ramis as director until Tim Allen
    was cast, who was chosen by Jeffrey Katzenberg to exploit his Home >Improvement popularity. Ramis didn't want to work with a comedian
    although Groundhog Day was brilliant) as he felt that he was the wrong >director for Robin Williams in Club Paradize (1986).

    Robert Gordon, the final screenwriter, was hired because producers
    didn't like earlier scripts which emphasized the dichotomy between the
    Jason character and performing Captain Taggert. Instead, Gordon made
    Jason more of an egoist, playing Taggert was the highlight of his
    career, who relished the attention. Because of this, Gordon wasn't shown >earlier scripts. Also, Gordon set the main action of the movie in space >rather than on Earth.

    Everybody had nice things to say about Alan Rickman, who, despite being
    a serious dramatic actor, had a great sense of humor, thought the script
    was funny and wanted the role. He didn't appreciate Tim Allen clowning
    around before the takes would start but came to accept him. He made fun
    of Allen, who was forced to act in the scene in wh8ch Mathesar (Enrico >Colantoni) is tortured, revealing the nature of fiction and storytelling
    to the childlike alien. After a number of different takes, Allen was
    upset that he didn't like the emotions he was feeling. Rickman
    sardonically observed that Allen had just experienced acting.

    The fans they chose to interview were wonderful, truly working on their >costumes and doing a nice job performing Thermians. I didn't see anybody >dressed as the enemy reptile.

    I'm going to defend the studio's insistence that the movie be less dark
    and edited to be released as a family movie. Truly, this movie should
    have been seen by parents with their kids. Apparently there was a lot of >swearing initially. It's better as a PG movie. But the obvious loop of
    Gwen swearing about the chompers made for a great sight gag.

    What the studio did wrong, of course, was marketing the movie to
    children to compete for the audience of the Rugrats movie, instead of >marketing it as a family movie. It never found its audience upon initial >release.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)