I'm not ignoring what you're saying. I'm disagreeing with it. I maintain that the design aesthetic that Matt Jefferies originated in TOS, and later refined for Phase II/TMP, is not based on, does not resemble, and is not of a kind with the post-war/"space age" aesthetic represented by, say, Forbidden Planet or Lost in Space or The Jetsons or umpty-zillion magazine covers from the era... no matter how you try to conflate the two. It is qualitatively different and distinct.I love Art deco for instance, but I always know what it is. Lawman, for instance, keeps ignoring what I m saying about the art style. Claming I am using a logical fallacy because I pointed out it used a clashing art style.
In other words...
Hear, hear.I don't dispute that the Enterprise doesn't match current sci fi styles, but I haven't seen anything else from the '60s that looks anything like it. If the features of the Enterprise are quintessentially 1960s, where are the other ships that have them?
As I've already stated, IDGAF about the stuff you're categorizing as "modern" designs (although that's a word with a specific, period-based meaning far more than "retro" is, so you should be careful about using it casually). Most of those, let's call them, "21st-century" designs you're celebrating are not particularly inspired or memorable. They're not any less likely to look dated over time than older designs; they're very much of their time. Nor are they more aesthetically pleasing than older designs; in fact many are downright ugly.I agree, for the most part [the refit] did a fantastic job on the old girl. But some people simply can not accept reality that it has features which date it and do not flow with modern designs.
As I've said, for instance, I don't care at all for John Eaves' design for the Enterprise-E. On the other hand, I'll concede that the Ent-E looks downright elegant compared to the kludgy mess that's the Shenzou, and the Discovery itself isn't much better. Of course, both of those are still head and shoulders above the godawful hideous Klingon ship designs we've had foisted on us.
So how are these designs better? What advantages does this newer aesthetic offer, aside from being recognizable as the current trendy thing? (Indeed it's not even clear how that's an advantage, as it just makes these designs indistinguishable from designs in non-Trek properties; indeed many of them wouldn't look out of place in nuBSG or Dark Matter or The Expanse.)
Well, if that's what they're doing, that's a problem. I want them to think about it. I want something better than just another variation on the theme that every second designer in Hollywood is already playing....Just as someone designing ships and such today would use modern stylings and likely not even think about it.
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