Why is melodrama such a bad thing? I never understood the lack of tolerance toward it.
To be honest this entire thread has been derailed, as it became clear early on that different people are talking about very different things. Discussion requires common definition, and like cultcross said, the definition of a lot of these terms "plot", "characterization", etc, are non-standardized. I kinda regret making the thread now for that reason, but I was bored, and it is what it is.
Generalities are sometimes taken far too literally - Aristotle put character at number 2 on his list - so some people took that to mean a heavy bias away from characters - 'characterization is unimportant' - hardly what he was saying placing it at 2.
Perhaps some forumers who were agreeing with the thread's premise were misinterpreted. But just because some respondents maybe didn't articulate their point precisely, in arguing for more emphasis on rational plots, and the incorporation of as much science as possible, does not mean they were advocating Star Trek become a BBC 4 documentary.
For my part, I pointed out in the original post that I wasn't sure "melodrama" was the right word for what I was describing. Unfortunately people have probably Googled the precise definition in spite of that caveat, and are treating it as if that is what we are discussing - heightened emotionalism or whatever the official definition is.
I tried to point out it wasn't what I meant, but ya know how forums are... if it's in the thread title, thats the end of it.
If I might make an observation:
TrekBBS, as I've said before, has a bit of a clique, of people with an overlapping tendency to dislike TNG - sometimes exalt DS9 above all other Star Trek - I'm generalizing a bit, they tend to underplay Roddenberry's admittedly sometimes controversial influence (which I nevertheless think was important) - sometimes dislike the irreligious qualities of most of Trek in favor of Ronald D Moore's tendency toward mysticism - say that TOS and TNG were never any good - or downplay Star Trek's science fictional qualities in favor of their own preference for science fantasy. It's a philosophical standpoint that lionizes DS9's character drama and tendency away from TNG-like futurism.
And there is a smaller clique of people who, I wouldn't say prefer, but certainly appreciate, Star Trek's scientific qualities and reputation for philosophy, it's attempts, however successful, to imagine a different form of society - it's Steven Pinker style view into future trends - it's medium-hard science fiction aspects. I find myself in that category.
Since they share the same world-views, they will tend to all upvote each other, etc.
I appreciate their viewpoint, and respect it. People are entitled to their opinions/tastes - but it does have a tendency I think, to blind some folks to the qualities of Star Trek that they personally don't feel that same love for any more, as if they are objectively less enthralling for everyone.
Actually whether you find things like futurism, engineering, thought-experiment plots and science fascinating depends less on them being simplistic qualities that a niche obsess over, and more to do with what emphasis on life you choose to take - as you become less concerned with a given part of the natural order - you will actually find it less interesting as if it is objectively shallow - rather than because your mind is elsewhere. A naturalist world view can yield all kind of personal and metaphysical insight, and is bottomless in depth. But paying more attention to emotional intelligence and character nuance can almost make you think nature/plot/realism is less nuanced/important than emotional naturalism, rather than being a very important part of our human experience. After all, the objective reality is a big part of our emotional nuance!
For my part I think Star Trek explained it best; neither emotional intelligence or natural realism should be any less important - as Picard would say: study Shakespeare AND Einstein. Don't neglect the natural world when working through the complexities of the human experience. And conversely don't forget the human experience when studying the natural wonders.
Star Trek was always human drama, but it was ALSO a world with a heavy tendency in favor of what was considered realism in it's given era - people became fans because they loved characters like Kirk, Spock and McCoy, but ALSO, because Star Trek was a really deep setting full of possibility and plausible views of the future. You can't separate these things. Star Trek wouldn't have been a phenomenon if it's creators hadn't tried to make it more believable than its horrible contemporaries.
Classic cinema, like Jaws, as the original article pointed out, also had a tendency to do this, which is why they are timeless. They balanced emotion and realism in a plot - didn't let realism get in the way of a good story - but also looked for the natural realistic situations in which to set their drama, rather than contriving it.
Of course people who love looser fantasy and slice of life fiction will look at characterization and say
"aha, thats why Star Trek is a global phenomenon", and of course people who went the other way and became fans of the engineering and science will say
"aha, thats why Star Trek is a global phenomenon". But they are missing the point by dismissing the other. All I want to do is show the importance that a rational plot can play in a human drama - and how the two can back each other up to make something even stronger for the fact that realism was factored in.