We haven't seen it yet. And similarities can be in the abstract without the literal look.And yet it looks to be nothing like Guardians of the Galaxy.
We haven't seen it yet. And similarities can be in the abstract without the literal look.And yet it looks to be nothing like Guardians of the Galaxy.
Social issue dramas like THE DEFENDERS, EAST SIDE/WEST SIDE, SLATTERY'S PEOPLE, and THE BOLD ONES tackled many more tough issues than STAR TREK did, and they did so head-on, without the trappings of purple polka-dotted people, to paraphrase Roddenberry.
If STAR TREK was on par with anything in the '60s, it was on par with other well-regarded action-adventure shows (I SPY, MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE).
Exactly. And I SPY touched on the issue of drug addiction in an excellent episode ("The Loser") guest staring Eartha Kitt where there was no last-minute resolution or rescue. TOS never touched drug addiction and when TNG did it, it was an after-school special.
I don't think Trek has ever been like Interstellar (which IMO goes into nonsense fairy land at the end, ruining a good movie) or The Martian.
Here's an article poached from a thread of mine a few years ago: http://io9.gizmodo.com/was-star-trek-ever-really-intelligent-grown-up-science-1563605154
from the second trailer, it does not look to be like guardians of the galaxy but trailers can be deceiving. I just pray the film does not end up been like guardians of the galaxy.And yet it looks to be nothing like Guardians of the Galaxy.
I know what people are trying to say - but I still don't agree with this kind of thing, and I see it as revisionism for the sake of revisionism when some Gizmodo blog argues Star Trek was "never intelligent to begin with", or something of that sort.
I don't know why there is so much upset of Chris Pine's comments. I thought he was being critical of the the studios mentality that only films heavy on action and explosions can make money. I didn't think he was being rude to fans or calling Beyond crap like some have suggested.
Anything can be trivialized. And people do seem to be making an effort at that for whatever reason. USS Einstein is correct in his assessment of revisionism. Some folks go so far as to deny Star Trek was optimistic and an inspiration to the careers of generations of intelligent people such as many of those at NASA, etc., who outright say that Star Trek and its vision is the reason for what they do.Exactly. Folks are having a knee-jerk reaction because their perception of TREK is greater than perhaps what the show actually is.
Some folks go so far as to deny Star Trek was an inspiration to the careers of generations of people such as many of those at NASA, etc.
Explain?You do realize that whole second paragraph is basically pot/kettle.
I'm not sure if you watched the same film as I did.TUC is nothing if not an "evil conspiracy to start a war with the Klingons that ended up shoving these "meaningful" political allegories down our throats and providing an utterly confusing and nonsensical plot with some awfully strange character inconsistencies, as well as a heap of plot holes and comically plot convenient devices."
I'm not sure if you watched the same film as I did.
I'll consider TUC nothing then.
Come on. I never said STID was bad solely because of its overcooked allegories, and neither did I say the old films were anything approaching cinematic masterpiece. I know you guys like to get very defensive when it comes to this stuff, perhaps I posted in the wrong forum, but don't go putting words in my mouth.I've watched both, several times--there is nothing in TUC that is more sophisticated in its commentary on "current events" than in STiD. I enjoy both films--I actually enjoy every Trek film (even those that get slammed) but the new films in no way come up short against the old ones (I'd say the reverse, but I allow for differences in available technology and in filmmaking styles). Naturally, one can prefer one approach over another, but let's not pretend the "prime" movies were anything approaching cinematic masterpieces.
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