Star Trek is space opera, as 90% of it is action and adventure and very rarely hard science.
Are you trying to tell me Protomatter isn't real?!?

Star Trek is space opera, as 90% of it is action and adventure and very rarely hard science.
This is why I am worried about Paramount wanting trek to be like the film
As far as Trek being made into pulp space opera, the ship sailed on that two movies ago. I wouldn't expect the third outing to be somehow "worse" in that regard whether it imitates GOTG or not.
Star Trek has always been more associated with action than it has science. "Fun and exciting" does not mean the same thing as "anti Trek."
Around 1964.This is why I am worried about Paramount wanting trek to be like the film
As far as Trek being made into pulp space opera, the ship sailed on that two movies ago. I wouldn't expect the third outing to be somehow "worse" in that regard whether it imitates GOTG or not.
That ship sailed a long, long time ago.
let's not pretend "pulp space opera" hasn't been a major aspect of Trek long before Abrams came along.
let's not pretend "pulp space opera" hasn't been a major aspect of Trek long before Abrams came along.
An "aspect" of Trek, not its totality. I know what he's talking about.
let's not pretend "pulp space opera" hasn't been a major aspect of Trek long before Abrams came along.
An "aspect" of Trek, not its totality. I know what he's talking about.
An essential aspect.
To put things in non-Trek fan perspective, I mentioned to a friend that Lin was directing and Pegg was co-writing, his response was, "Good. Maybe it won't be boring."
To put things in non-Trek fan perspective, I mentioned to a friend that Lin was directing and Pegg was co-writing, his response was, "Good. Maybe it won't be boring."
As opposed to?
To put things in non-Trek fan perspective, I mentioned to a friend that Lin was directing and Pegg was co-writing, his response was, "Good. Maybe it won't be boring."
As opposed to?
Sorry, that was in reponse to a comment further upthread, but I was too slow on the draw.
Paramount's goal is to make as much money as possible with "Star Trek" - they don't care if it upsets Trek fanboy if they do something that causes twice as many regular Joes to go and watch. They problem they face is that regular Joe doesn't care about Star Trek, he's already branded the concept as "boring", so I can see why Paramount decided to mix it up with Lin instead of Orci, since they were unable to build on '09.
On the other hand "regular Joes" seem to be the subject of a great deal of questionable speculation and assumption-mongering, as if they were some exotic separate species.
On the other hand "regular Joes" seem to be the subject of a great deal of questionable speculation and assumption-mongering, as if they were some exotic separate species.
To put things in non-Trek fan perspective, I mentioned to a friend that Lin was directing and Pegg was co-writing, his response was, "Good. Maybe it won't be boring."
Nope. They're the common species with money to spend on movie tickets. Trek fans are the exotic separate species.
It always amuses me when fans insist that the general audience won't accept anything too fantastic or unrealistic . . . despite the fact that the average moviegoer seems to have no problem with alien robots who turn into cars, British kids attending wizard school, Disney pirates fighting ghost ships and sea monsters, a lovestruck teenage girl torn between a pale brooding vampire and a hunky werewolf, and hobbits.
SF/fantasy is not just for hardcore aficionados anymore--and hasn't been for some time.
Uh, I thought AbramsTrek was supposed to have fixed that already and won over General Joe. Not so? Or is this just the "you're just being a fanboy whiner" rhetoric migrating to fresh targets?
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