Same reason you need a hospital, an office or a ranch.Human discovery?? I'm sure that will factor but why would you need a a big golden space ship to do that?
Same reason you need a hospital, an office or a ranch.Human discovery?? I'm sure that will factor but why would you need a a big golden space ship to do that?
To see how your characters react. Science fiction is about changes in technology and scientific discovery and how human beings will react to them. It does not automatically mean "spaceships and aliens."Human discovery?? I'm sure that will factor but why would you need a a big golden space ship to do that?
Any basic creative writing course will tell you plot and story should come from characters, not the other way around. You determine what your characters want and need, what choices they would organically make, and build your story around that. Try the Scriptnotes podcast. I think you would find it very illuminating.Human discovery?? I'm sure that will factor but why would you need a a big golden space ship to do that?
They are like pawns in the game. The 'game' rules. Characters, props, sets are used to tell the story. The story is specific to science fiction of the future and I'm lead to believe .. discovery. No one is suggesting we won't get to know the characters along the way.
I could argue that with a good movie, TV show, play, or literature, the characters are more important than the plot. The character's actions, interactions, and reactions is what we usually care about, and the plot is simply the stage upon which those characters act, interact, and react.They (the group of people) are props too.
Let's look at Balance of Terror.Trying to think of Trek episodes I really enjoyed and that are generally considered to be "good"
Balance of Terror
Best of Both Worlds
The Visitor
Darmok
I wonder how they would fit in this argument....
Of course. But I'm talking about the show and franchise over all. Its emphasis has always been on people and situations not Futurism and Science.
I agree, but that plot does not need to be highly original, or necessarily (in the case of Star Trek) need to be about exploration. Great films or TV shows could have simple plots, and great Star Trek could be about something other than the exploration of space.I think Aristotle was suggesting that each thing subtly comes from the other - the plot is necccecary for characterisation to even take place - because the characters are only revealed in adversity - and adversity is plot, so there would literally be no characterisation without plot.
Same goes for why he places dialogue after plot and character - because if characterisation can only be revealed in plot, dialogue can only be revealed in characterisation and is literally meaningless if it has no character to reveal - so ironically what people think is the originator of the action is it's shadow.
How can I put this another way? So, the purpose of drama is to reveal how the unique quirks and features of an individual emerge into a unique reaction from their interaction with their reality - so the first thing you need is a reality that is believable enough within context to react to, or else the writer's hand becomes obvious - then dialogue, no matter how witty, can only mean anything in revealing the philosophy that the character lives by consciously or not - Tony Stark is revealing B, by talking C, and B is best revealed in encounters with A.
That's a bit hyperbolic. Why would it be garbage if the writing and acting are still strong?Change the setting and remove futurism/science from it and it's just another garbage show like thousands of others.
I agree, but that plot does not need to be highly original, or necessarily (in the case of Star Trek) need to be about exploration. Great films or TV shows could have simple plots, and great Star Trek could be about something other than the exploration of space.
As French writer Georges Polti once suggested, there are really only 36 dramatic situations. I could argue that there are hence really only 36 basic plots for stories.
Georges Polti's 36 Dramatic Situations:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Thirty-Six_Dramatic_Situations
...take away the science fiction, and it isn't Star Trek.
There was also tension and excitement created by the plot. What were the aliens up to? Who were they? When it became known they were warlike Romulans testing the defenses, that again amped up the tension. Then, of course, the cat and mouse battle was exciting. There was a clear goal of the need to stop the Romulans from returning home to prevent a war. So, it's a combination of plot and characters that produced a great story.Let's look at Balance of Terror.
That basic plot was done in 1959 and on a WWII submarine for the film Up Periscope. The plot is a pretty simple one of cat-and-mouse, and does not necessarily needs to have taken place in space or involve Romulans (as evidence by the aforementioned WWII film Up Periscope).
So if it's not the plot that sets that StarTrek episode apart as being one of the best episodes, then what does set it apart? I think the strongest quality of that episode are the depth of characters for the Romulan antagonists. That character depth was presented to us via some superb dialogue and very good performances.
^^^I was looking for the space wizards and laser swords.
Sorry. Wrong room.
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