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If Star Trek Beyond Is The Last Film Should They Start NuTNG or Recast

Re: If Star Trek Beyond Is The Last Film Should They Start NuTNG or Re

Yeah because it's sound science to have genetically engineered blood that can bring you back from the dead. I mean, they found the cure to death (which makes no sense), and just abandoned it for centuries!

So you're once again moving the goal posts...

KIRK: Bones?
MCCOY: He'll live.
KIRK: My compliments.
MCCOY: No, I'm good, but not that good. There's something inside this man that refuses to accept death. Look at that. Even as he is now, his heart valve action has twice the power of yours and mine. Lung efficiency is fifty percent better.

So I think "Space Seed" gives them wiggle room.

As the Agony Booth review pointed out:
It would? It's just matter transportation, which is also unscientific, at least according to our current understanding. But magic blood? I don't understand how humans found the cure to death and then abandoned it and just...oh my god, this movie makes my brain hurt.

You mean technology that got lost after a devastating war where, as Spock points out, whole populations were being bombed out of existence?

Space Seed said:
SPOCK: Your Earth was on the verge of a dark ages. Whole populations were being bombed out of existence.

I thought the genetically engineered supermen, augments, whatever were super strong and intelligent and aggressive, not immortal with the cure to death in their bodies. That's too much of a stretch for even the silliest of Trek.

Why is it too much of a stretch for fiction when, in the real world, we're beginning to use blood and other components of the human anatomy to help with disease? Why is it too much of a stretch when, in the real world, we are able to bring people back from being clinically dead?

Well you have a far higher rate of tolerance of the cheese factor than I do.

It was fun to watch. It amazes me how joyless some people's lives actually are.

I'm watching Space Battleship Yamato 2199 right now, you'd likely have a stroke based on your reactions to the Abrams films. But it is flat fucking fun to watch.

Bah, it should be a 10.

Why should The Wrath of Khan (a movie I love) be given a '10' when it has as many brainless gaffes as Star Trek Into Darkness?
 
Re: If Star Trek Beyond Is The Last Film Should They Start NuTNG or Re

Just to check, I looked at the top critics on Rotten Tomatoes. As I thought, the consensus (the 'average' of the critiques) still doesnt include 'unintelligent.' The major criticism simply seems to be that some found it too similar to its predecessors, including the films predating Abrams. Not alot of rousing support for the 'not like older Treks' comment there.

So scrolling down the top critics, the very first positive review calls it 'intelligent.' The rest include:
-Rolling Stone pegging it as 'witty'
-WSJ claiming it has a 'lippy regard for cultural legacy',
-Entertainment Weekly 'everything you'd want in Star Trek movie',
-LA Times has it 'satisfying all basic Trekkie cravings',
-USA Today 'Thrilling spectacle with noteworthy moments of intimacy',
-Chicago Tribune "The human element, and the Vulcan element, to say nothing of various other species, are present, accounted for and taken seriously enough to matter",
-Slant 'densely plotted, but the clarity of direction keeps the drama',
-New York Magazine/Vulture "Abrams has a gift for making us feel as if Star Trek Into Darkness vaulted from our own Trek-ish daydreams."
-Times 'alternates between silly and Shakespearean.'

Keep in mind this is just the ones I can see on first glance (there's more below the scroll), and it's just the ones who mention the actual plot and writing in the couple or so lines on Rotten Tomatoes page (most of the tiny summaries don't go into detail at all, and just say 'Tis good, go see it.') Yes there are some calling it dumb, but it's hardly 'most' critics.

What I find funny is that you're summation ('fun but dumb') pretty much covers all the negative reviews, not the overwhelmingly positive majority. I suppose you could claim that's the majority if you skip all the ones that contradict your assertion, but that would be silly. Oh, and even they tend to sing Abrams praises for his direction.

I also didn't give TWOK a 10. It's an 8/10 film that got an extra point from me for pure enjoyment. For me 10/10 is near flawless, which TWOK is most definitely not.

Orci and Kurtzmen only did two of the Transformers movies - the first of which was actually pretty well received. Theyre also producers on Transformers Prime, which was very well received by fans and critics. So your point was? Shall we play the game of combing through the filmography of every other major Trek writer? Coz the latest batch aren't the ones who are going to come out looking the worst off - they never wrote 'Endgame' or 'These Are the Voyages...'

I also have a question. If the critics opinions don't matter to you, why on earth are you trying to push that they actually agree with you?
 
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Re: If Star Trek Beyond Is The Last Film Should They Start NuTNG or Re

Missed this before...

It'd be like going from a PS4 to an Atari 2600.

I own and play both! It is just a great time to be alive. Thinking about buying an Atari 5200 sometime this Summer, haven't played Dreadnaught Factor in forever!
 
Re: If Star Trek Beyond Is The Last Film Should They Start NuTNG or Re

It really isn't regarded as a dumb film. The article you linked really wasn't a review, more of a rant.
Uh..yes it is. Beyond the fact that even the most positive reviews on your Rotten Tomatoes link say its dumb and exhausting, here's some other reviews:

http://io9.com/star-trek-into-dumbness-507058729

http://www.agonybooth.com/movies/Star_Trek_Into_Darkness_2013_Detailed_Review.aspx

http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-e...even-the-most-committed-trekkies-8609801.html
www.nypost.com/p/entertainment/movies/lost_in_space_xoqlzpJ1zWW4E9uKZsJpfN

http://sequart.org/magazine/21469/star-trek-into-darkness-hostile-to-star-trek-intelligence/

http://fabiusmaximus.com/2015/03/29/review-star-trek-into-darkness-81291/

Remember, the guys who wrote this film also wrote the Transformers films...

Etc. As you can see, I'm not alone in calling it stupid, plenty of "professional critics" called it stupid and mundane.

Magic blood? Really? How little do you know about medical science? Seriously? We use blood to cure certain diseases, we can bring people back from being clinically dead in some cases.
Yeah because it's sound science to have genetically engineered blood that can bring you back from the dead. I mean, they found the cure to death (which makes no sense), and just abandoned it for centuries!

As the Agony Booth review pointed out:
It would? It's just matter transportation, which is also unscientific, at least according to our current understanding. But magic blood? I don't understand how humans found the cure to death and then abandoned it and just...oh my god, this movie makes my brain hurt.

I thought the genetically engineered supermen, augments, whatever were super strong and intelligent and aggressive, not immortal with the cure to death in their bodies. That's too much of a stretch for even the silliest of Trek.

Well you have a far higher rate of tolerance of the cheese factor than I do.

I'd say calling it dumb (literally one major review calls it "Into Dumbness") and the most positive reviews still emphasize how brainless it is, that's lambasting it. I don't think being called "dumb" is a compliment, but that's me.

No, just the quotes from Rotten Tomatoes and the other reviews, etc.

Well,when I read the actual quotes from these reviewers, they weren't very praising, it was "well, this is stupid, but it's fun. Turn your brain off and enjoy it for the weekend". The same kind of response I see a lot are giving "Jurassic World". A far cry from "this film is an excellent tale of life and death and great science fiction" or whatever. Then again, that's what the makers of these films want, popcorn action films that will sell fast and make easy money, they're not looking to tell deep, intelligent stories or anything like that, so I guess the joke is on me for even criticizing them for this.

Also presented as a fact, also provably untrue as some posters on this board can show. Some were/are, some weren't/still aren't.
The vast majority of teenagers and young adults have never seen the show, and have little knowledge of it. If you think the original series is this hugely popular show with this generation, then you're just wrong. Most people who are exposed to Star Trek from the Abrams films would find TOS boring and beyond out of date. It'd be like going from a PS4 to an Atari 2600. Even I, who grew up on TNG and DS9 and love those shows, find TOS boring and corny.

Since 2013, TWOK's IMDB score has actually gone up. For some strange reason, a lot of new people started marking it as watched and giving it a pretty decent rating. Back when I voted on it around 2010, it was a 7.5. Now it's a 7.7.
Bah, it should be a 10.

Well, there are a number of points in the above I would like to address.

First of all, ID is a dumb film. Well, that's fine that others treat it as such. For me, it is a highly enjoyable, psychological romp through the consequences of both Kirk's choices, Spock's choices, and the overall consequences of Nero's attack.

Is it for everyone? Certainly not, but I do not buy in to the idea that ID is a "dumb action film" and really wish that phrase could be stricken from common vernacular :rolleyes:

Second, "magic blood." I can't fault the writers for this, since as BillJ pointed out, Space Seed establishes Khan's regenerative abilities. In addition, modern medical science has various uses for human blood, and the term "blood doping" is used in reference to athletes who use pharmaceutical and blood transfusion to boost oxygen capacity. Platelet therapy is also used in wound healing, among other uses.

Finally, how many times has Trek made amazing circumstances or scientific discoveries, only to never acknowledged them again? How about the episode where the transporter is used to cure Pulaski's premature, advanced aging, due to genetically engineered humans? Or even McCoy's cure for aging in "The Deadly Years?"

As for TWOK, it gets 7/10 from me, putting it in my top 3 Trek films. I admire it for the amount of work Meyer and Bennet had to do to pull all the elements together, especially with a tighter budget. I don't appreciate the body horror, or more sadistic elements of the film, and the tone is certainly a marked change from TMP. I appreciate the visuals, but the story beats are hit and miss for me.
 
Re: If Star Trek Beyond Is The Last Film Should They Start NuTNG or Re

Missed this before...

It'd be like going from a PS4 to an Atari 2600.

I own and play both! It is just a great time to be alive. Thinking about buying an Atari 5200 sometime this Summer, haven't played Dreadnaught Factor in forever!

Ha! Somone uses gaming as an analogy for going backwards and making things too simple, and they're using playstation as the 'better' option?

*puts on snob glasses*

Pffft, console gamers...:cool:

In all seriousness, I still have an Atari as well. I keep meaning to get it fixed, but it looks like I'll have to send it overseas.
 
Re: If Star Trek Beyond Is The Last Film Should They Start NuTNG or Re

The trouble is it's a clash of cultures basically. There's two groups of people who enjoy the larger Trek but in differing ways, you can see the clash clearly in arguments such as this. Recently a simple editorial cartoon put it perfectly. It's the difference between 'fans' and 'fanboys'. Those who can acknowledge the flaws without brow-beating others into submission are 'fans', those who cannot accept the flaws and will argue till their dying breath are 'fanboys'.
 
Re: If Star Trek Beyond Is The Last Film Should They Start NuTNG or Re

I notice how you skipped mentioning the panel where it points out 'fanboys' are the ones who try to argue that 'their' thing is 'better'. It's the one that is immediately before 'fanboys think they're right and everyone else is wrong.'

I also don't think anyone here (on either side) has said that any movie discussed are free of flaws. Unless that was what was meant by 'TWOK should have got a 10'.
 
Re: If Star Trek Beyond Is The Last Film Should They Start NuTNG or Re

I notice how you skipped mentioning the panel where it points out 'fanboys' are the ones who try to argue that 'their' thing is 'better'. It's the one that is immediately before 'fanboys think they're right and everyone else is wrong.'

I also don't think anyone here (on either side) has said that any movie discussed are free of flaws. Unless that was what was meant by 'TWOK should have got a 10'.

Oh, right. So I guess we're just going to ignore the dozens of pages of posts pretending that the Abrams films are without flaws... okay. Sure. Because that makes sense. Or when those flaws are begrudgingly acknowledged they're explained away with thick layers of convoluted fanwank.
 
Re: If Star Trek Beyond Is The Last Film Should They Start NuTNG or Re

I know I never claimed that, and have said quiet the opposite more than once. BillJ has said similar sentiments in this very page, and Fireproof outright said the movie wasn't for everyone. They explained why what they see as flaws do not kill the movie for them, not that the flaws don't exist.

I personally don't really care about Mooks reasoning for not liking the movie. What I do care about is his trying to somehow present it as being any more than what it is - an individual opinion, that doesn't happen to line up with the popular or critical consensus. That last part is where were clashing.

So no, there's no ignoring here. Just pointing out that 'disagreed with Overgeeked's arguments' doesn't equal 'Get out of the way Shawshank Redemption and The Godfather, there's a new Best Movie Ever in town!'

As for your cartoon, maybe you should have been more cautious before throwing that particular stone. When somone brings it up to try and score points in a fanboy arguement, then they've pretty much inevitably shot themselves in the foot. That's exactly the sort of behaviour it's mocking.
 
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Re: If Star Trek Beyond Is The Last Film Should They Start NuTNG or Re

I know I never claimed that, and have said quiet the opposite more than once. BillJ has said similar sentiments in this very page, and Fireproof outright said the movie wasn't for everyone. They explained why what they see as flaws do not kill the movie for them, not that the flaws don't exist.

Then you're reading different posts than I am. The ones I'm reading are spending a lot of mental energy to explain away the flaws, that is, to explain why the flaws aren't actually flaws, why it really does make sense if you just read poster X's or Y's explanation of this or that. That's a whole lot different than explaining why the flaws don't kill the movie for some.

I personally don't really care about Mooks reasoning for not liking the movie. What I do care about is his trying to somehow present it as being any more than what it is - an individual opinion, that doesn't happen to line up with the popular or critical consensus. That last part is where were clashing.

Trouble is, there is a popular consensus ("It's a good movie") and a critical consensus ("Fun but dumb") but posters are conflating the two, trying to claim that the "It's a good movie" comments by general audiences somehow erases the "Fun but dumb" comments by general audiences and critics. There's a dozen or so links to various critics' articles and posts lampooning the films. If you choose to ignore those that's your prerogative of course, but it doesn't change the fact that they exist. What's more, there's also a rather rabid vein running throughout a few of these threads that seems to be arguing that somehow ticket sales equate to quality, rather than sheer lowest common denominator commerce. Or that somehow listening to expert opinions is elitist and wrong. Sorry, but if an English teacher tells me something about English literature, I'm far more inclined to listen to them than some random schmo. So yeah, when writers say the writing's bad, you listen. When critics say it's "fun but dumb" you give that more weight than a general audience who thinks "It's a good movie".

So no, there's no ignoring here. Just pointing out that 'disagreed with Overgeeked's arguments' doesn't equal 'Get out of the way Shawshank Redemption and The Godfather, there's a new Best Movie Ever in town!'

Never claimed any such thing. Nice try though. 1/10.

As for your cartoon, maybe you should have been more cautious before throwing that particular stone. When somone brings it up to try and score points in a fanboy arguement, then they've pretty much inevitably shot themselves in the foot. That's exactly the sort of behaviour it's mocking.

Not trying to score points or use the cartoon to 'win' anything. I spotted it online and thought it was apropos to the thread. There are a few posters here who are decidedly on the 'fan' side of that cartoon and a few posters here who are decidedly on the 'fanboy' side of that cartoon. I thought it was a worthy contribution. Sorry you disagree.

The behavior the cartoon is mocking seems to be the uncritical gushing love of things that clearly have flaws, and further the need by those same fanboys to argue anyone who disagrees to exhaustion. I saw it, immediately thought of this thread, and laughed. There's a "it's fun but it's not perfect crowd" and a "no, fuck you, it's perfect" crowd. It would be even funnier if the latter weren't so... earnest.
 
Re: If Star Trek Beyond Is The Last Film Should They Start NuTNG or Re

Unfortunately for you, board rules state you're not allowed to comment on other posters. Posts, not posters. Which is why with the benefit of a little thought, I am just going to back away and leave that whole issue be. It's not worth what could happen if I continue egging that discussion on.

And we're back to what to 'majority of critics say it's fun but dumb' again. All that's been proven is that some critics have said that - something I, nor anyone else ever denied.

However, according to the various sources that only exist to accumulate that information and find the 'critical consensus', it's not majority opinion amongst actual respected-by-most-of-the-population critics. I alone quoted nearly a dozen critics stating the exact opposite, just from the initial 30 or so listed under top critics on Rotten Tomatoes.

And uh...the last two 'fun but dumb' links are hardly what I'd call 'convincing' sources. One is a 'geopolitical realism' website, and the other is a website devoted to comics. They're critiques yes, but no more informed than anyone else from the 'unwashed masses.'
 
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Re: If Star Trek Beyond Is The Last Film Should They Start NuTNG or Re

Then you're reading different posts than I am. The ones I'm reading are spending a lot of mental energy to explain away the flaws, that is, to explain why the flaws aren't actually flaws, why it really does make sense if you just read poster X's or Y's explanation of this or that. That's a whole lot different than explaining why the flaws don't kill the movie for some.

New to fandom I take it? We've been explaining away flaws and jamming square pegs into round holes for the last fifty-years collectively.
 
Re: If Star Trek Beyond Is The Last Film Should They Start NuTNG or Re

Half a second ago I just had to ask others if the difference in warp speeds between TOS and TNG was actually established in the show, or if it was just an EU retcon to fix the disprepency. Fanwank is just that ingrained in Star Trek. I mean, that's how Sulu and Uhura got first names.

The EU seemingly exists solely to try and 'fix' continuity tangles. See Greg Cox's Herculean effort to explain how Khan and friends could be waging war upon one another in the 1990's, yet when the series actually showed the 90's the Augments were nowhere to be seen.
 
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Re: If Star Trek Beyond Is The Last Film Should They Start NuTNG or Re

... how Khan and friends could be waging war upon one another in the 1990's, yet when the series actually showed the 90's the Augments were nowhere to be seen.
Never been a problem in my eyes, America and therefor Los Angeles either wasn't involved in the war at all or it was yet another far away battlefield for American troops.
 
Re: If Star Trek Beyond Is The Last Film Should They Start NuTNG or Re

I personally think the writers either forgot that was established, or decided to just pull a Marvel and slide the time scale to accomodate reality (somewhat justified considering DS9 had Khan being in power '200 years ago,' when it would have been around 300 by that point if you went by the dates in TOS and ENT). I didn't really care about the error all that much, it's just another in a long history that you either explain away or ignore. Kinda like 'James R Kirk.'

Greg got around it by having Augments as being behind-the-scenes string-pullers in real life conflicts, with their involvement not becoming known until later - basically a secret history scenario. On the other hand, the latest comic decided to dispense with even maybe presenting Trek as our future, and had Khan atom bomb Washington and Moscow to end the Cold War. Admittedly, that wouldn't have destroyed LA.
 
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Re: If Star Trek Beyond Is The Last Film Should They Start NuTNG or Re

The hardest aspect of Trek prime canon to deal with due to its age is the establishment of events that were in the future back in the TOS days which have come and gone and didn't happen. There's really no way to make that work so you have to just see Trek Prime as an alternative what-if universe in and of itself. The TOS bible discouraged writers from dating things for this very reason but you don't go through 79 episodes without winding up doing some of that. If Trek were to go through a _real_ reboot rather than the "soft" reboot of JJ Trek then it would provide the writers an opportunity to refashion Trek from the foundation of the 21st century rather than the LBJ administration.

Of course, the problem with doing THAT is that the majority of speculation about the future focuses on humanity increasingly shedding its biology (i.e. the singularity) while space-travel appears to be more and more inhospitable to life. The idea of a manned naval-inspired interstellar fleet is a romantic one, but probably not likely if technology continues along current trend-lines.
 
Re: If Star Trek Beyond Is The Last Film Should They Start NuTNG or Re

The hardest aspect of Trek prime canon to deal with due to its age is the establishment of events that were in the future back in the TOS days which have come and gone and didn't happen. There's really no way to make that work so you have to just see Trek Prime as an alternative what-if universe in and of itself. The TOS bible discouraged writers from dating things for this very reason but you don't go through 79 episodes without winding up doing some of that. If Trek were to go through a _real_ reboot rather than the "soft" reboot of JJ Trek then it would provide the writers an opportunity to refashion Trek from the foundation of the 21st century rather than the LBJ administration.

Of course, the problem with doing THAT is that the majority of speculation about the future focuses on humanity increasingly shedding its biology (i.e. the singularity) while space-travel appears to be more and more inhospitable to life. The idea of a manned naval-inspired interstellar fleet is a romantic one, but probably not likely if technology continues along current trend-lines.


Yeah, that's the frustration of more scientific discoveries, even if they are amazing. The romantic notion of Star Trek style space travel seems even more out of reach, though, as many scifi writers do, there are some amazing leaps in technology that allow for it to be more common place. It just might take longer to actually reach that point.

I personally would love a reboot of Trek from a contemporary historical and technological perspective. As it is, Star Trek feels almost like a continuation of the Fallout universe some times ;)
 
Re: If Star Trek Beyond Is The Last Film Should They Start NuTNG or Re

I own and play both! It is just a great time to be alive. Thinking about buying an Atari 5200 sometime this Summer, haven't played Dreadnaught Factor in forever!
You can actually play Atari 2600 games? :P I, who's two favorite games are on the Super NES, cannot even go that primitive. Pac-Man on there....

First of all, ID is a dumb film. Well, that's fine that others treat it as such. For me, it is a highly enjoyable, psychological romp through the consequences of both Kirk's choices, Spock's choices, and the overall consequences of Nero's attack.
Dumb films can be fun, Into Darkness just isn't fun. It could just be context, I guess I just expect more from Star Trek. Then again, even as an action film, it kinda sucks IMO. Want a good dumb action film? Watch Commando or The Last Stand.

Is it for everyone? Certainly not, but I do not buy in to the idea that ID is a "dumb action film" and really wish that phrase could be stricken from common vernacular :rolleyes:
Didn't you just say it's a dumb film? Well, it won't be stricken from the vernacular because it is dumb.

Second, "magic blood." I can't fault the writers for this, since as BillJ pointed out, Space Seed establishes Khan's regenerative abilities. In addition, modern medical science has various uses for human blood, and the term "blood doping" is used in reference to athletes who use pharmaceutical and blood transfusion to boost oxygen capacity. Platelet therapy is also used in wound healing, among other uses.

Finally, how many times has Trek made amazing circumstances or scientific discoveries, only to never acknowledged them again? How about the episode where the transporter is used to cure Pulaski's premature, advanced aging, due to genetically engineered humans? Or even McCoy's cure for aging in "The Deadly Years?"
I don't know why we're trying to say this is scientific. It's as unrealistic as warp drive, if not more so. But it makes even less sense, because A. why would humanity abandon the cure for death, and B. this:

That whole super-soldier blood thing


Kirk dies in this film. Well, for a bit. Fortunately for Kirk it turns out Khan's super-engineered blood seemingly cures the body of, well, everything. Kirk's luck doubles when Bones accidentally discovers the potential power of Khan's blood after injecting it into a dead tribble and... wait, why is Bones injecting blood into dead things? Anyway, long story short: Khan has magic blood and they use it to revive Kirk after a very convenient series of last-second events.

The problem with this isn't the fact that they've now effectively cured death for every living thing with veins, but how this development was tied into the plot. By this point in the film we know that The Enterprise is carrying a payload of 72 missiles containing Khan's super friends. Bones could have used blood from any of these, but instead we're treated to a foot chase across future LA. It's only when we realise that Bones would actually have had to remove one of the frozen soldiers to freeze Kirk's body that the whole injecting-blood-into-dead-things makes sense (I don't think he's too bright).

And whilst we're on the point, the foot chase itself is just an excuse to get Uhura and Spock together so they can realise they love each other by beating on a man who only wanted to get some revenge on the people who betrayed him. They do this by beaming Uhura - the ship translator - down into the melee, rather than five security officers. But if they can do that, surely there's no reason why they couldn't beam Khan straight into the brig? In fact Khan does precisely this not long before. But then I guess we'd never have got to see Spock do a Hulk-out, and punching things is so cool.
http://www.theshiznit.co.uk/feature/the-5-million-dumbest-things-about-star-trek-into-darkness.php


and the tone is certainly a marked change from TMP. I appreciate the visuals, but the story beats are hit and miss for me.
Isn't Star Trek 1 often called the "motionless picture"? I've never finished it, and have only seen a the whole thing via Nostalgia Critic.

Ha! Somone uses gaming as an analogy for going backwards and making things too simple, and they're using playstation as the 'better' option?

*puts on snob glasses*

Pffft, console gamers...:cool:
The Playstation line up is probably the greatest lineup of any console, and I'm a Nintendophile.

Never been a problem in my eyes, America and therefor Los Angeles either wasn't involved in the war at all or it was yet another far away battlefield for American troops.
I like Federation: First 150 Year's cop out, that we're in some different timeline, thus the Eugenics Wars never occurred.

Unfortunately for you, board rules state you're not allowed to comment on other posters. Posts, not posters. Which is why with the benefit of a little thought, I am just going to back away and leave that whole issue be. It's not worth what could happen if I continue egging that discussion on.
I don't even know what are you talking about?

-Rolling Stone pegging it as 'witty'
-WSJ claiming it has a 'lippy regard for cultural legacy',
-Entertainment Weekly 'everything you'd want in Star Trek movie',
-LA Times has it 'satisfying all basic Trekkie cravings',
-USA Today 'Thrilling spectacle with noteworthy moments of intimacy',
-Chicago Tribune "The human element, and the Vulcan element, to say nothing of various other species, are present, accounted for and taken seriously enough to matter",
-Slant 'densely plotted, but the clarity of direction keeps the drama',
-New York Magazine/Vulture "Abrams has a gift for making us feel as if Star Trek Into Darkness vaulted from our own Trek-ish daydreams."
-Times 'alternates between silly and Shakespearean.' Keep in mind this is just the ones I can see on first glance (there's more below the scroll), and it's just the ones who mention the actual plot and writing in the couple or so lines on Rotten Tomatoes page (most of the tiny summaries don't go into detail at all, and just say 'Tis good, go see it.') Yes there are some calling it dumb, but it's hardly 'most' critics. What I find funny is that you're summation ('fun but dumb') pretty much covers all the negative reviews, not the overwhelmingly positive majority. I suppose you could claim that's the majority if you skip all the ones that contradict your assertion, but that would be silly. Oh, and even they tend to sing Abrams praises for his direction.
You're really going to make me read through Rotten Tomatoes? Okay...

"The 9/11-style attack on London at the film's beginning is followed by backstory upon cover story and bright rhetoric soars and false flags are planted. They darkly wave. Political opportunity is not wasted on ready opportunists."

"In terms of sheer spectacle, there's no denying that it delivers. For all the build-up, hype, and hope leading up to the film, it's just a shame there isn't a whole lot more."

"The effects are exhilarating, even in these jaded post-3D days, and there are enough action set-pieces, humour and character development to distract from a plot that isn't exactly sci-fi's final frontier."

"It's generally a lot of fun, but it's exhausting, and the busyness only somewhat disguises the fact that the story doesn't entirely make sense."

"...a terminally perfunctory followup that just barely gets the job done.."

And this is just on the first page. Need I go on? My point being that even positive reception says its stupid.

I also didn't give TWOK a 10. It's an 8/10 film that got an extra point from me for pure enjoyment. For me 10/10 is near flawless, which TWOK is most definitely not.
Ok?

Orci and Kurtzmen only did two of the Transformers movies - the first of which was actually pretty well received. Theyre also producers on Transformers Prime, which was very well received by fans and critics. So your point was? Shall we play the game of combing through the filmography of every other major Trek writer? Coz the latest batch aren't the ones who are going to come out looking the worst off - they never wrote 'Endgame' or 'These Are the Voyages...'
The Transformers films are well regarded as some of the most retarded shlock to come out of Hollywood, so I'm not sure where you're going with this. When it comes to pure dumb in Trek, I'd say the Abrams films are on top. Not the worst though, film or otherwise. But certainly the most brainless.

I also have a question. If the critics opinions don't matter to you, why on earth are you trying to push that they actually agree with you?
People said critics disagree with me, as if that's some argument, so I'm simply showing otherwise.

The trouble is it's a clash of cultures basically. There's two groups of people who enjoy the larger Trek but in differing ways, you can see the clash clearly in arguments such as this. Recently a simple editorial cartoon put it perfectly. It's the difference between 'fans' and 'fanboys'. Those who can acknowledge the flaws without brow-beating others into submission are 'fans', those who cannot accept the flaws and will argue till their dying breath are 'fanboys'.
Well to be a fanboy you'd have to defend the franchise and basically anything in it. I think a lot of "old" Trek is garbage too, most of it actually. TNG and DS9 are great series, but everything else is hit or miss, or just plain crappy. So I'd say defending substandard films is more fanboyish :P

So I think "Space Seed" gives them wiggle room.
So refusing to die = magic blood? I didn't know that's what they were going for in the '60s. I figured it was just an off-handed comment on his resilience. If the argument is Trek is full of nonscientific silly fluff, yeah that's true, but some things are just too much of a stretch even in this context. At least IMO.

You mean technology that got lost after a devastating war where, as Spock points out, whole populations were being bombed out of existence?
I thought genetic engineering was established as being banned in the Trek universe, not that any knowledge on it was lost, which I guess would be a better argument why not, but they act like it's something they've never heard of. Also, does the Abrams films even follow this storyline, they never even explain anything about where Khan is from or anything about the "Eugenics Wars". None of this makes it any less silly or fill in the massive plotholes.

Ban or not, I don't see any human society giving up a cure for death.

Why is it too much of a stretch for fiction when, in the real world, we're beginning to use blood and other components of the human anatomy to help with disease? Why is it too much of a stretch when, in the real world, we are able to bring people back from being clinically dead?
Because a magic cure for death is silly, what else can I say? I'm not sure why I have to explain this. I didn't make up the "magic blood" name for this anyway XD

https://www.google.com/?gws_rd=ssl#q=into+darkness+magic+blood

It was fun to watch. It amazes me how joyless some people's lives actually are.

I'm watching Space Battleship Yamato 2199 right now, you'd likely have a stroke based on your reactions to the Abrams films. But it is flat fucking fun to watch.
Looked it up, it's some anime, and I'm not into anime, mostly because it's cheesy and for kids. I guess TOS kind of reminds me of an anime with a lot of its silliness, but it's a million times more intelligent though than Japanese cartoons.

Why should The Wrath of Khan (a movie I love) be given a '10' when it has as many brainless gaffes as Star Trek Into Darkness?

Just an opinion. But it does? If you nitpick any film, you'll find stupid and silly things, but to me, that's just a stupid practice. To me, it's as flawless as a Trek film can get, and most Trek films are just blegh.
 
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Re: If Star Trek Beyond Is The Last Film Should They Start NuTNG or Re

I don't know why we're trying to say this is scientific. It's as unrealistic as warp drive, if not more so. But it makes even less sense, because A. why would humanity abandon the cure for death

Once again, I think the "whole populations being bombed out of existence" could explain why certain technologies didn't carry forward. But shame on Abrams for making a film based on TOS that extrapolates from TOS and not what the fans think.

Also, the bastard should be brought before a firing squad for extrapolating from current science because no science fiction ever does that.

Isn't Star Trek 1 often called the "motionless picture"? I've never finished it, and have only seen a the whole thing via Nostalgia Critic.

My favorite of the Star Trek films.


I like Federation: First 150 Year's cop out, that we're in some different timeline, thus the Eugenics Wars never occurred.

We're not talking about our timeline, we're talking about 1996 as presented in Star Trek: Voyager "Future's End" where there is no evidence of the Eugenics Wars going on. Though we do get to see a model of the DY-100 on Rain Robinson's desk.

When it comes to pure dumb in Trek, I'd say the Abrams films are on top. Not the worst though, film or otherwise. But certainly the most brainless.

You obviously haven't watched very much Star Trek. :guffaw:

Captain Janeway, Lieutenant Paris and their offspring would like to have a word with you...

 
Re: If Star Trek Beyond Is The Last Film Should They Start NuTNG or Re

All the Star Trek tv series and films have numerous "flaws." And...?
 
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