Oh, please. My reasons for hating it has nothing to do with "lord Gene Roddenberry." Not everything about liking TOS is about Roddenberry.I like ST 09 and think its great. Others think it is an abomination before the lord Gene Roddenberry.
Oh, please. My reasons for hating it has nothing to do with "lord Gene Roddenberry." Not everything about liking TOS is about Roddenberry.I like ST 09 and think its great. Others think it is an abomination before the lord Gene Roddenberry.
It's a joke...I do that...Oh, please. My reasons for hating it has nothing to do with "lord Gene Roddenberry." Not everything about liking TOS is about Roddenberry.
I can see your point from a plot perspective, but it's also the movie that gave us three really awesome ships that got reused throughout TNG. The Excelsior is probably my favorite ship in all of Star Trek. So I can't really hate the movie, if only for that reason. Plus it has Christopyer Lloyd.I completely hate TSFS, and the whole execution of the movie I thought it was weak.
I enjoy Star Trek 3 for many reasons, one of them is having Christopher Lloyd and John Laroquette as Klingons. But let's admit that Kirk using his former bridge crew was an act of pandering to the movie audience more than what the character of James Kirk might have done.I agree with most of your assessment. I did like that Scotty, Sulu, Chekov, and Uhura each got a couple of scenes in which to shine. What a shame you don't seem to appreciate that. I guess it makes more sense that Kirk can pull off a jailbreak, steal a starship, pilot a starship, and do everything himself, with absolutely no help from anyone.
It's not a bad thing that Kirk isn't some sort of superduperman. Protagonists who never make mistakes are tiresome. Remember that Spock can outthink Kirk in matters of logic and making a plan and sticking to it. Kirk can outthink Spock in matters of gambling, risk-taking, and intuition. They balance each other nicely.I enjoy Star Trek 3 for many reasons, one of them is having Christopher Lloyd and John Laroquette as Klingons. But let's admit that Kirk using his former bridge crew was an act of pandering to the movie audience more than what the character of James Kirk might have done.
It kinda stings that Spock managed to singlehandedly fool Starfleet and his ship's captain and kidnap Admiral Pike to return him to a forbidden planet like Talos 5, and yet Kirk with all the resources from Starfleet still needed others to help him? So be it, but why use 5 senior citizens when Kirk surely knows a LOT of younger, stronger fighters who probably also owe him a blood debt.
Sure I liked seeing Sulu do some martial arts and Scotty give Styles his comeuppance, but Kirk's plan was seconds away from failing.
Let's not forget it resulted in the death of his son David.
I may be wrong since I don't obsess with Star Trek beginning with TNG, but I do believe they are long-lived meaning they live for an extended number of years, but I don't think the aging process for humans has slowed down (for example they do not retain the vitality and strength of a 20 year old until their 60s). They just keep getting older.As for "senior citizens"... good grief. Ageist, much? They're not senior citizens by 23rd/24th-century standards, though the actors were by RL standards.
Again, this is the Producers wanting to please the audience by having the original crew along, even briefly. rather than sound tactics. After arriving at Genisis they seem to almost completely fade into the background.These characters are the people who Spock worked with for many years. They are his friends, though he won't say it aloud about any of them besides Kirk and McCoy.
Kirk gave them the chance to back out. They refused and insisted on continuing with the mission. They might not be youthful anymore, but they were hardly ready for the rocking chair.
Sigh.I'd rather Kirk not pull off a jailbreak, or steal the Enterprise but be looked upon as a valid starfleet officer who has served the military with shining honors, colorful decorations of valor. His colleague - the Black Fleet Admiral - don't trust Kirk's instincts or his many years of experience. This was not some Captain who lost his way, this was Admiral James T. Kirk who toppled a serious super villain who wanted to threaten space with a world destroying weapon. That enough should grant him the Enterprise, for full repairs and do what's necessary... with a crew. Scotty, Chekov and the bunch can move on, get their well deserved promotions and closed the book. Bad plot, incoherent story, a very retarded villain, bizarre executions, that movie was so stupid that it was beyond logical sense.
That's nice. Neither do I. My Star Trek preferences are TOS and Voyager. The vast majority of my print 'zine collection is TOS. The vast majority of the fanfic I read online is Voyager. I like the rest of the older series to a greater or lesser extent. I'm even tolerating Enterprise somewhat. I loathe DiscoTrek and Picard and the nuTrek movies. So kindly do not imply that I worship at the altar of Berman.I may be wrong since I don't obsess with Star Trek beginning with TNG...
We're talking about the movies here. I seem to recall that Patrick Stewart/Picard had quite a lot of action scenes and sequences in the movies, as opposed to the TV series, and he didn't have much help from either Riker or Worf.... but I do believe they are long-lived meaning they live for an extended number of years, but I don't think the aging process for humans has slowed down (for example they do not retain the vitality and strength of a 20 year old until their 60s). They just keep getting older.
Lol ageist. In TNG Picard had Worf and Riker to do most of the running and fighting. For an important mission/possible suicide mission, Kirk would have had strapping young security redshirts, as he always did.
So? If they "fade into the background" can't you just pretend they aren't there and let the rest of us enjoy seeing them?Again, this is the Producers wanting to please the audience by having the original crew along, even briefly. rather than sound tactics. After arriving at Genisis they seem to almost completely fade into the background.
If a screenwriter, when being told that one approach to a film needs to change because of xyz reasons, and as a result the only thing he/she can come up with is the least dramatic, least interesting take possible...then he/she really isn't much of a screenwriter. I suppose you'd have preferred the fan version of The Search for Spock someone came up with:
That's a preposterous example and a false alternative. This is not some either/or.I suppose you'd have preferred the fan version of The Search for Spock someone came up with:
(Grandiose music and opening credits)
Kirk and McCoy beam down to the Genesis planet.
SPOCK
Captain, what took you so long?
(Grandiose music and closing credits)
I find that an interesting comment considering who wrote this 2 partner. I'm a huge TOS fan and think Continues nailed it. Comparing it to season 3, it is a worthy successors. My only issues with the finale were the destruction of ships specifically called out in canon production materials. I've considered making some fan edit tweeks to fix that. I found all of Continues to be better in nearly every area to the first season of Discovery.Their scripts were typically mediocre compared to their production values.
Why is that surprising? Outside of Continues he has a singular Written by script credit, everything else is a Novel by or Based on the Novel by. And I'm denying him nothing by that observation. Even selling one script is hard...let alone getting it produced (helllllo Development Hell my old nemesis). But screenwriting is a different animal than novel writing, and what works in one doesn't necessarily work in the other. Lots of great novelists who've tried to make the transition and haven't been successful, especially at first (Michael Chabon's two early cracks at adapting his Kavalier and Clay were pretty bad...I've read them).I find that an interesting comment considering who wrote this 2 partner. I'm a huge TOS fan and think Continues nailed it. Comparing it to season 3, it is a worthy successors. My only issues with the finale were the destruction of ships specifically called out in canon production materials. I've considered making some fan edit tweeks to fix that. I found all of Continues to be better in nearly every area to the first season of Discovery.
Actually, it's you who refuses to acknowledge the validity of other viewpoints.Ok, I'm jumping off here since since none of my points seem to matter. but before...
We get it. You can't stand any of the post-TWoK movies that use the second-tier characters and would have preferred the bland newcomers instead (come on, David was an unethical scientist and Saavik 2.0 was less interesting than watching paint dry).If a screenwriter, when being told that one approach to a film needs to change because of xyz reasons, and as a result the only thing he/she can come up with is the least dramatic, least interesting take possible...then he/she really isn't much of a screenwriter
It does away with all the people whose presence annoy you. Kirk is there. Spock is there. McCoy is there. Nobody else is required, and this fan script provides for that.That's a preposterous example and a false alternative. This is not some either/or.
Why is that surprising? Outside of Continues he has a singular Written by script credit, everything else is a Novel by or Based on the Novel by. And I'm denying him nothing by that observation. Even selling one script is hard...let alone getting it produced (helllllo Development Hell my old nemesis). But screenwriting is a different animal than novel writing, and what works in one doesn't necessarily work in the other. Lots of great novelists who've tried to make the transition and haven't been successful, especially at first (Michael Chabon's two early cracks at adapting his Kavalier and Clay were pretty bad...I've read them).
And...... we're done.I disagree. Writing is screen play is not that big a challenge. [snip]
LOL... sorry to burst you bubble, but I don't find screenplays that hard to write. I find novels harder. A novel is easier to sell making them more profitable to spend your time on. If you can write a short story and if you can write in different voices, it shouldn't take much to master a screenplay. Being able to craft a cohesive story of the right length is the hardest part. When you have that, the rest is format.And...... we're done.
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