Embrace or Reject?: "Space as treated like an ocean.

Discussion in 'Future of Trek' started by TribblesAreAmok, Sep 27, 2011.

  1. TribblesAreAmok

    TribblesAreAmok Cadet Newbie

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    I was wondering what you guys think of the treatment of space as and ocean? That meaning the ships don't travel in three dimensions in battle (but can out of battle) like naval warships. Or would you prefer the more realistic depiction of spacecraft moving in 3d space. I much prefer the more realistic 3D space battles as they are much more dynamic and interesting to watch.
     
  2. Sean Aaron

    Sean Aaron Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    If it was some kind of weird space fantasy where the ships used actual sails to "ply the aether" then that could be groovy, but otherwise I think it's pretty lame. If the show is set in space and is attempting any degree of believability then three dimensions should be utilised - hell even the crappy TNG films did that.
     
  3. C.E. Evans

    C.E. Evans Admiral Admiral

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    Realistically, ships should never be in visual range of one another during combat. I could see if the weapons range was only a few hundred feet, but if it's supposed to be a few hundred thousand kilometers, then we should only see enemy vessels represented as dots on a monitor screen, IMO.
     
  4. TribblesAreAmok

    TribblesAreAmok Cadet Newbie

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    to the above, I always thought that the ships simply are that big, or the viewscreens simply zoom in. to 2nd post, I do not mean literal boats, but the fact that in WOK it was a plot point that the enterprise flew under kahns ship.
     
  5. Sean Aaron

    Sean Aaron Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Treat space as 3D or make it a fantasy.
     
  6. Caesar753

    Caesar753 Commander Red Shirt

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    I would prefer a more 3D approach to space in Star Trek, but I can see why it hasn't really been utilized. Trek fans, especially those with scientific backgrounds, know how space really works. The general public, however, doesn't care or pay attention to such things, which is why the issue was never really addressed on TV.
     
  7. sojourner

    sojourner Admiral In Memoriam

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    Only situations involving more than 2 ships are inaccurate. With 2 ships the only odd thing with how Trek portrays it is that both ships are oriented the same.
     
  8. Gaith

    Gaith Vice Admiral Admiral

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    So long as the story is compelling, I don't hugely care what the battles look like.
     
  9. Relayer1

    Relayer1 Admiral Admiral

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    IIRC the early Galactica reboot scenes were tiny ships fighting silently in space. I remember a shot of Galactica arriving which was little more than a fine bright line with a tiny dot at the end.

    I liked it but it presumably wasn't as exciting for Joe Public...
     
  10. JarodRussell

    JarodRussell Vice Admiral Admiral

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    I always saw that sea-faring analogy more general. The spaceships and their crews in the 23rd century are a lot more like sailing ships and their crews in the 17th century. Planets are new shores, and space is the ocean between them. There's discovery, there's trading, there's dangers, there's myth and romance.

    I guess that well devoloped interstellar traveling races would indeed create a proper coordinate system, so that ships would indeed travel in the same plane, relative to where they currently are. Every solar system has a specific plane, so if a ship is between two planets, it would probably move relative to that plane. If it's in orbit, the orbital plane or maybe the equatorial plane is the reference. If they are outside the solar system, the galactic plane will be the reference.
     
  11. Auralis

    Auralis Captain Captain

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    Take submarine combat as model to base combat on. Its largely the same, 3d environment, unseen enemy vessels, but located by sensors etc...
    And you can make it very intense as lots of submarine war movie showed.
     
  12. Bread

    Bread Lieutenant Commander

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    TWOK depicted both of these notions of a sea and 3D did it not?

    The approach towards each other of the Enterprise and Reliant, just like two sailing frigates, passing to fire upon one another.

    The battle in the Mutara Nebula was conducted entirely across 3 dimensions. Spock even alluded to 2 dimensional thinking before the Enterprise is manouvered through the 3 dimensions to ultimately defeat Reliant.
     
  13. Kegg

    Kegg Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    And here's the problem, no?

    There's no compelling reason to ignore three dimensions besides laziness or the conveinence of visual short hand (if a starship is 'upside-down' that might feel a little disorienting) and likewise, little reason for starships to bank and turn as if they're in an environment.

    But if a starship battle is not something you can actually see, well, one either needs to rethink how to shoot starship battles in a manner that's dramatic, or fudge realism for the sake of an exciting image. Submarine only partially works here - ignoring that Star Trek has, of course, done this (the cloaking device began as a space analogy to submarines) any space fights where the ships aren't able to obscure vision of each other aren't going to be a lot like submarine battles.

    The same argument can usually be made for sound in space, although I liked Battlestar Galactica's semi-solution of hearing the sound from within a given fighter or starship.
     
  14. C.E. Evans

    C.E. Evans Admiral Admiral

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    Which is actually a compelling enough reason for producers and directors to do so. While science nerds may like the idea of seeing "upside-down" ships, I would gather most viewers do not--unless it's for dramatic purposes, and Trek has done that on occasion, especially since TNG.
    One reason I came up with is that it's to protect the crew from being smeared over the bulkheads because inertia dampers can only compensate for so much. Every starship probably can pivot on its axis, but it's not recommended at high velocities.
    But isn't that exactly what they do? We hear them call out distances of ships being thousands of kilometers apart and yet we see them fit nicely on our television screens only a few inches apart.
    Why wouldn't they be? If two ships aren't within visual range of one another, then they would have to be like submarine battles in which most of the action is inside the vessels. In that regard, the TOS episode "Balance of Terror" is probably one of the more realistic space battles filmed.
    It's the old case of dramatic necessity versus scientific accuracy. It can be argued that there's no music in space too.
     
  15. Kegg

    Kegg Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Well, yes. But if you want to show them being thousands of kilometers aparrt, how do you make that interesting to look at, is the question.

    Not if they have sensors, remember. Unless your scrapping that technology, they've never been needed to be able to eyeball something with the naked eye to be able to know it's there.

    There's no music inside the starship either.

    However music is not the same thing. It's a dramatic convention that is clearly disconnected from the actions on the screen - we know that nothing is 'making' the music. Conversely, using noises for starship battles is one of the many little ways Hollywood can ignore how something is supposed to sound (in this case, not at all) in favour of how it ought to sound.
     
  16. C.E. Evans

    C.E. Evans Admiral Admiral

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    You can't. It's too big of a distance to fit on a television or movie screen.

    The only real options are to either make the intension within the respective vessels (i.e., among the crewmembers) like TOS generally did or to fudge reality (mostly distances) for dramatic purposes like subsequent Trek shows have done.
    Huh? Why wouldn't starships suddenly no longer have sensors? Even submarines had sensors in the form of radar.
    Exactly, so it's all about remembering that it's a TV show (or movie) meant for mass entertainment, so you have to accept that dramatic necessity will frequently trump scientific accuracy.
    I disagree. It's a storytelling tool to establish a particular mood for a scene or to emphasize it.
    In other words, it's meant for dramatic purposes like music.
     
  17. Kegg

    Kegg Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Making it interesting is subjective, no? I wouldn't say one can't, just because it hasn't occurred to one.

    For your argument to work you need to throw sensors out. Otherwise yes, it won't be like a sub battle because they reliably know where the other starship is.

    It's a different tool. Hollywood often makes guns sound like something other than what guns sound, makes swords sound different to what swords sound, and so on. Adding sound to space is on the order of that kind of fudging of reality, and is substantially different from music.
     
  18. C.E. Evans

    C.E. Evans Admiral Admiral

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    It really is a case that you can't. In the part of my post you omitted, it really is as simple that it's too big a distance to show on any screen.
    First of all, what argument are you accusing me of, because I think you're talking about something I'm not. Secondly, why would I need to throw sensors out?
    You've lost me now.
    Not at all. It's used for dramatic effect rather than for realism.
     
  19. Galileo7

    Galileo7 Commodore Commodore

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    Agreed. I always felt the refit Enterprise in TMP on the big screen of a movie theater was like a sailing ship of old Earth oceans.
     
  20. O'Dib

    O'Dib Commodore Commodore

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    I liked the sound in space solution of Serenity, where the battle was only heard because it took place in a nebula. Trek09 had exciting upside down takes, and solved the distance issue by making the enemy vessel immense.