I think being able to just turn it off and enjoy a movie or TV show is one of the things that actually keeps my brain working as well as does.You probably shouldn’t turn off your brain. You need that.
I think being able to just turn it off and enjoy a movie or TV show is one of the things that actually keeps my brain working as well as does.You probably shouldn’t turn off your brain. You need that.
It's been ages since I saw 'A Boy and His Dog' but I don't remember it deviating too much from the source material. Was it more of a tonal difference, as in the movie people didn't get the memo that horrific things the story portrayed weren't supposed to be presented in a positive light?
I'll be honest, while his work is often imaginative, most of the time I have no clue where Ellison was coming from or what he was driving at. Mostly (and I'm just referring to his stories here) he just seemed to be pissed off, if not outright disgusted at the universe for existing.
I guess. I mean it certainly seems to apply to that story (I forget the title) where the bloke spends his whole life searching for the literal, physical manifestation of happiness.He had a thing for small human victories in the face of an incredibly unforgiving and hateful universe. And leaving it to you to decide if they were really victories at all.
Hate to burst bubbles, however, BOTH Star Wars and Star Trek are space fantasies/space operas. BOTH use science and technology as magic. For whatever reason an individual can prefer one over the other, but they are far more alike than credited.
I wonder if Lucas would have gone down that road if he had stuck with it?Some of the fantasy series do take a more scientific approach to their magic, with explanations of how it affects matter and energy, it's equal/opposite reactions, ect.
Significantly advanced Technology can be mistaken and likened to magic, simply because the technology behind it or physics is unable to be understood.. So too can the power of the force be misunderstood, hence the rise of the religious orders dedicated to it's facades.. Dark and Light. But what I would love to see, is the franchise take a look at it in a distant future from the science aspect, and show that there are weapons that make use of the force, thus giving a different type of feel and arms race in the future
It was always toxic, it just didn’t have a reason to do much until then. Now social media has allowed to be worse than before. But a specific group of fans have always been this awful, we just hear about it now.The STAR WARS fandom has been toxic since 1999.
Since at least Ewoks, if not before. It's just easier for individuals to express themselves, for good or ill.The STAR WARS fandom has been toxic since 1999.
.Significantly advanced Technology can be mistaken and likened to magic, simply because the technology behind it or physics is unable to be understood.
So too can the power of the force be misunderstood, hence the rise of the religious orders dedicated to it's facades.. Dark and Light. But what I would love to see, is the franchise take a look at it in a distant future from the science aspect,...
I think that all so called"fantasy" can be explained by science and physics. It's just a matter of finding what can work to explain it.
Then you have the Steven Universe fandom sending death threats to fan artists or the Rick and Morty fan base rioting in McDonalds over a tie in sauce that was a throw away joke in one episode. I would say it's the internet giving people anonymity but that shows that it's not so true any more as the line between online and off has become blurred.Actually, I think a more accurate question would be a broader one, "At what point does a program's fandom become toxic and a detriment to that which it purports to be in support of" Hopefully we can be honest and self-aware to the fact Star Trek (or any franchise's) fandom at some point can be viewed as being just as "toxic" as this thread's question insinuates regarding "Star Wars."
I remember in the 90s I was thrilled to go on AOL. The first place I went was their Star Trek area. Sadly, it was traumatizing. Folks were flat out cliquish and rude. Everything seemed to start a fight. God forbid you also like other shows as well as Star Trek! So let us in glass starships refrain from throwing stones.
Actually, I think a more accurate question would be a broader one, "At what point does a program's fandom become toxic and a detriment to that which it purports to be in support of"
It's not that they're disappointed, it's more a sense of entitlement. They think they deserve something from a show and when they don't get it or get it the way they want, they lash out. I'm disappointed by a lot of shows and movies, but I don't feel the need to attack the cast or crew on Twitter.Well you would hope that (and I actually think that, though I may be behind the times) fans who are really disappointed with something would just stop watching it, which would be detrimental to it in a sense but a much milder sense than is usually invoked in conversations of fandoms being poisonous.
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