In his 1987 writer's guide for TNG, Roddenberry did not want stories about warfare with Klingons or Romulans. Also, no stories with Vulcans. So much for "Unification 1" and "Unification 2".
Beyond that, I appreciate what GR did to create Star Trek, but I also don't feel like he somehow gets all the credit and is above criticism.
Avoiding the most famous aliens of the Original Series is certainly in line with that: Next Generation should go on to make its own aliens. The Ferengi flopped massively as antagonists, alas, and attempts like the Seley and Anticans and Benzites were almost doomed to be minor-leaguers from the start, but when Next Generation finally got serious about making its own villains it succeeded brilliantly with the Borg --- surely Next Generation's biggest contribution to mass pop culture --- and tolerably well with the Cardassians. (Admittedly, while the Cardassians offer a lot of interesting story potential, nobody outside the fandom cares about them, other than as a pun on the Kardashians that's rarely made.)
^ Agreed.
Beyond that, I appreciate what GR did to create Star Trek, but I also don't feel like he somehow gets all the credit and is above criticism.
For serious: he doesn't have to get "all" the credit or be exempt from criticism. It would just be pleasantly refreshing if threads like this didn't quite so predictably deteriorate into ludicrously over-the-top slagging-off that people like me have to come in and call out (because the major participants are wrapped up in either doing it or making excuses for it).
Beyond that, let us return to the beating up of Abrams, a man who deserves itSee, GR isn't the only one who gets it
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Where's Doc Brown and his chalkboard when you need him?
They're stuck in the darkest 1985.![]()
Needs more lines adding. There's a universe created when Nero arrives and then there's another universe created when Spock arrives later. Presumably, there's also another universe created when Vulcan is sucked into a black hole and its remains are spewed out somewhere.
Oh, and there's also the universe created from the remains of the Nerada too.
Red Matter: Creating universes since 2233
Beyond that, let us return to the beating up of Abrams, a man who deserves itSee, GR isn't the only one who gets it
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Abrams is a good director. He knows how to shoot a scene in an exciting way, how to create a look for his picture, and give the actors the direction they need. He knows how to tell a visual story effectively
However he thus far does not seem to have a good story to tell nor the ability to write one; almost every film he has made has been a sequel, reboot, or in the case of Super 8, a emulation of Spielberg, and most films he has writing credits on are not known for their strong story elements.
From what I've seen the blame rests with the writers, who have established a pattern of writing schlock for the most part, as well as with Abram's production company. Since Abrams' company is behind the new films I guess Abrams gets some fault for not having an interest in telling a good Star Trek story, or for respecting the type of tone that fits Star Trek (the new films are way more along the lines of overplotted Star Wars films vs. anything like Star Trek).
Kurtzman & Orci, now there is a pair that definitely warrants a "beating".
But, how is that any different then the fact that the Prime Universe was already dead, and never to be returned to onscreen, before these movies were made?Sorry I actually believe the Prime Universe still exists. If the writers say it exists its good enough for me. Nothing canon in nuTrek says that PrimeTrek has been wiped out, but nothing is saying it exists either.
However the producers, writers, comics and everyone else explained that the Prime Universe was still there within days of ST09 being shown in the US. So I'm surprised when someone pops up 5 years later and says the Prime Universe is gone. Yes it could be gone but it just as well could be there so why not think the best?
Well said.
For the record, I am willing to accept that the prime universe still exists. But that does little to sooth my aching heart for all that preceded the new films, since this new timeline will be the one focused on from this point onward.
In other words, I do not see any films bringing us back to Vulcan in the previous timeline. For filmmaking purposes, I'm pretty sure that the production company considers that timeline "dead."
At the risk of playing amateur psychologist, it does sometimes seem as though portions of fandom are still working their way through the classic stages of grief:
Denial: "This isn't Star Trek!"
Anger: "Damn you, J.J. Abrams!"
Bargaining: "Okay, you can have your nuTrek movies, but any new TV series will go back to the old continuity, right?"
Depression: "Star Trek is dead to me."
Acceptance: "When's the new movie coming out?"![]()
At the risk of playing amateur psychologist, it does sometimes seem as though portions of fandom are still working their way through the classic stages of grief:
Denial: "This isn't Star Trek!"
Anger: "Damn you, J.J. Abrams!"
Bargaining: "Okay, you can have your nuTrek movies, but any new TV series will go back to the old continuity, right?"
Depression: "Star Trek is dead to me."
Acceptance: "When's the new movie coming out?"![]()
Beyond that, let us return to the beating up of Abrams, a man who deserves itSee, GR isn't the only one who gets it
![]()
Abrams is a good director. He knows how to shoot a scene in an exciting way, how to create a look for his picture, and give the actors the direction they need. He knows how to tell a visual story effectively
However he thus far does not seem to have a good story to tell nor the ability to write one; almost every film he has made has been a sequel, reboot, or in the case of Super 8, a emulation of Spielberg, and most films he has writing credits on are not known for their strong story elements.
From what I've seen the blame rests with the writers, who have established a pattern of writing schlock for the most part, as well as with Abram's production company. Since Abrams' company is behind the new films I guess Abrams gets some fault for not having an interest in telling a good Star Trek story, or for respecting the type of tone that fits Star Trek (the new films are way more along the lines of overplotted Star Wars films vs. anything like Star Trek).
Kurtzman & Orci, now there is a pair that definitely warrants a "beating".
It doesn't hurt that we're apparently living in a Golden Age of kickstarter-funded fan projects and independent productions, so there's getting to be plenty to divert people who aren't into AbramsTrek.
(Or I guess maybe a bunch of us are stuck in Bargaining, cuz it's kinda working out.)
"Who is Khan? (To quote Carol Marcus in the original TWOK). Isn't that an Indian name? Did he take that name as a moniker for himself? What is his backstory? Why are we supposed to care about this character? Why is his 'reveal' filmed like a revelation? (The people in this alternate universe never met him, Kirk should have been like, "Okaaay, so you're 'Khan'....What does that mean to me?")
I don't care when the next movie is coming out. It's going to have to be spectacularly wonderful to make me even tolerate it, let alone like it.It doesn't hurt that we're apparently living in a Golden Age of kickstarter-funded fan projects and independent productions, so there's getting to be plenty to divert people who aren't into AbramsTrek.At the risk of playing amateur psychologist, it does sometimes seem as though portions of fandom are still working their way through the classic stages of grief:
Denial: "This isn't Star Trek!"
Anger: "Damn you, J.J. Abrams!"
Bargaining: "Okay, you can have your nuTrek movies, but any new TV series will go back to the old continuity, right?"
Depression: "Star Trek is dead to me."
Acceptance: "When's the new movie coming out?"![]()
(Or I guess maybe a bunch of us are stuck in Bargaining, cuz it's kinda working out.)
I'm sorry, but those productions aren't going to capture all of the public's attention
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