Some times.Star Trek, in its better forms, is one of those pushing back.
And I don't think it is necessary. Star Trek is not a vehicle for social change that fans were told that it is.
Some times.Star Trek, in its better forms, is one of those pushing back.
Some times.
And I don't think it is necessary. Star Trek is not a vehicle for social change that fans were told that it is.
I find it thoughtful enough as it stands. Hopefully it continues forward in to Season 4 and explores different themes, like the dilithium shortage. Plenty of room for commentary in there.Yeah, it’s entertainment, first and foremost. But there are certain qualities that have separated it from other pop culture franchises, that have given it an identity, and thoughtfulness and humanitarianism are two of those qualities. It would do well, from my perspective, to preserve what makes it different.
I have to post a brand-new edition of my comedy series "Modern Trekkies if ______ Was New". I already have the next one half-written in my mind. I don't go in order. I go in the order of whatever pre-'90s Trek fits the best.
Modern Trekkies If The Wrath of Khan Was New (over 40 likes!)
Modern Trekkies If The Animated Series Was New
What a rewarding thing to have spent your free time doing!Years and years ago, on another board...I did this for TUC, which is an unmitigated fan darling of a film.
It was one of the most lengthy posts I've ever written, pointing out every plot hole, every writing flaw, every cheap moment, every anti-Roddenberry element of the film.
Yeah, I don't really think I'm in a good position to comment on time well spentAs somebody who has nearly a quarter of a million posts on The TrekBBS I know a thing or two about spending my free time well.![]()
Even earlier than that, if the Usenet posts left to us by the ancient ones are anything to go by.
I limit myself to 10 items where I can get the most entertainment value out of it. Got to keep it funny, relatively short, and a little bit over-the-top. With some outdated social values to boot.@Lord Garth you forgot a lot of what was wrong with TWOK, quite frankly
You mentioned the uniforms being different, but it's worse than that...they are highly militaristic, and that's not Star Trekky
Speaking of militaristic, what's up with all the military culture in this film? "Admiral on the bridge" and such....again, no respect for what makes Star Trek so great and so special or what Gene Roddenberry intended. Heck, the civilians in the film even refer to Starfleet as "the military." Absolute garbage.
You mention David Marcus...but you didn't mention the greatest offense, which is the outright kick in the teeth to the fans that we wouldn't know at this point that Kirk has a son. I mean, it's absolutely insane of these writers to just have a close family member appear out of nowhere that we have never heard of. What a joke.
It's grimdark too. Since when is Star Trek about revenge, old age, mid-life crisis, death, murder, rage, life regrets and mistakes, body horror, etc??? It's NOT! Star Trek is fun and uplifting and this is absolutely the opposite of that. Its miserable and mean-spirited at nearly every turn. I'm going to go watch The Orville and Lower Decks just to shower myself of this ick I feel.
It depicts the Federation and Starfleet in a non-utopian way, to the point where civilian scientists are convinced that Starfleet is evil enough to commandeer their work for use as a genocidal weapon of mass-destruction. This is not the Starfleet that we know, and I can't fathom why Federation citizens would feel this way...living in their utopia and thinking these things about their noble and honorable Starfleet.
Don't even talk to me about the lazy, hacky writing that takes place in this so-called "film."
-Self-indulgent literary references and quotes do not automatically make something smart and literate.
-They couldn't be bothered with science apparently, with the magic teraforming torpedo (that is fine-tuned to work on a lifeless planet, but apparently also SOMEHOW works on nebula gas). Forget the insanity that the Reliant just happens to detonate the device right in the goldilocks zone of a nearby star???
-Speaking of science...exploding planets. Just saying.
-The Reliant, nor Chekov, has any recollection of why the Ceti Alpha star system might be significant until they see the inscribed buckle?? Nope....stupid contrived writing that makes the characters look stupid...becuase that's what the entire plot hinges on. Lazy lazy lazy.
-This about this debacle: Enterprise is 12 hours and 43 min away from Regula One (at Warp 5) when Kirk calls for a meeting in his cabin...they talk for 5 to 7 min...and then apparently drop out of warp to get shot to bits by the Reliant. They have nothing but half-assed banged-up impulse power after the attack, and yet are somehow able to arrive at Regula 1 shortly thereafter??? C'mon kids....who writes this stuff?? And how can anyone just watch this and think this is ok? The fans who like this film will like anything with "Star Trek" in the title.
-Scotty brings a mortally wounded crewmember to the bridge following the battle. Not sickbay....THE BRIDGE. This is cheap...the writers and director trying to manipulate the audience into an UNEARNED EMOTIONAL REACTION regarding a character we don't know much about and don't care much about. But, I guess I'm supposed to cry because bad writing. Oh well....movie is garbage anyway.
- Phasers shooting Star Wars bolts...since when???
-How does Spock get from the Bridge all the way to main engineering, with a TON of time to spare, when David "the son nobody knew about" Marcus said that the device activates in 4 min??? I mean, the turbolifts are inoperative below C-deck....so Spock is literally moving down about 14 decks and then needs time to get past McCoy and repair the warp engines. I don't know about you guys....but I'd love to see the deck plans of how close Engineering must be to the bridge in order for that to happen. But oh yeah....the writers and producers don't care about Star Trek....I forgot LOL
Anyway, I thought I'd point out how much you missed about this "Star Trek in name only" film. I'd give it a 3/10, but too many other people rate it ridiculously high, so 0/10 just to normalize the ratings.
What a rewarding thing to have spent your free time doing!![]()
I limit myself to 10 items that I can get the most entertainment value out of it. Got to keep it funny, relatively short, and a little bit over-the-top. With some outdated social values to boot.
And I keep the attitude of Modern Trekkies, but stick the time of when these things came out, so I work in some of that '60s, '70s, or '80s flavor.
But, yeah. My God. TWOK was the worst! The worst! It's not Star Trek! I'm gonna have to watch some Orville to clean out my mind... wait a minute...
Same here and I find talking it out on discussion boards usually brings me back around. It's a nice exercise in to what I genuinely enjoy about Star Trek shows, which is usually the characters and the story. When I see the hyper detailed oriented posts I just have to smile because it isn't for me. I love a tech manual as much as the next crewmember (as long as it isn't Scotty) but I couldn't fathom sitting and watching an episode with my Mr. Scott's Guide to the Enterprise flipped open searching for how tech is presented. More power to those who do.I find myself getting sucked into fan negativity, even to the point where I start to question my own opinions and "likes." It's like..."wow, everyone else sure is angry and miserable. Maybe it's wrong that I don't feel that way too. Maybe I'm missing something I should be outraged about...."
Same here and I find talking it out on discussion boards usually brings me back around. It's a nice exercise in to what I genuinely enjoy about Star Trek shows, which is usually the characters and the story. When I see the hyper detailed oriented posts I just have to smile because it isn't for me. I love a tech manual as much as the next crewmember (as long as it isn't Scotty) but I couldn't fathom sitting and watching an episode with my Mr. Scott's Guide to the Enterprise flipped open searching for how tech is presented. More power to those who do.![]()
I am old enough to have used Usenet (ah, those pre Web internet days).
Imagine that on the old shows! XDOnly good side is that they remembered that beaming out a boarding party should be possible, something often forgot on other series.
That should really appear in S4 XDBut he is the ultimate weapon agsinst every dilithium powered vessel.
Jump in on spore drive, cry the the warp core to implosion, power up your core.
it´s called sukal maneuver
It really should have behaved like the typical 24th century computer, always asking for clarifications XDThe default computer would probably feel inclined to either discuss the command with Burnham at length, or then to send a cloud of crucial valves and other doodads with "regulator" to their name to outer space, crippling the vessel...
There is no greater honor for a Klingon than to die in battleLike when the Klingons boarding DS9 in Way of the Warrior?
Actually, it's quite cathartic....and it's also reassuring.
I find myself getting sucked into fan negativity, even to the point where I start to question my own opinions and "likes." It's like..."wow, everyone else sure is angry and miserable. Maybe it's wrong that I don't feel that way too. Maybe I'm missing something I should be outraged about...."
But then you start picking apart Star Trek movies or episodes that everyone universally praises, and you realize that it's all flawed and broken, and that the people bitching are essentially full of shit and picking their spots.
So yeah, it makes me feel great. Thank you.
Both things are quite doable even with *today’s* technology, so I don’t see the problem.This is a computer that knows to open the door or not for someone walking towards it, depending if they pause momentarily to issue a final remark. It knows that when the captain says "Bridge to Engineering", that the message should be piped to Engineering before the word is even uttered.
even much easier (and much more convenient), just delay the broadcast until the recipient is called. Only them get to hear the call and it isn’t going to make much difference.As for piping the calls, for all we care they are broadcast for the whole ship before the response turns them private. After all, we don't get split screens in Trek: we either hear Picard say "Picard to Riker", so we can't tell if LaForge and Barclay also heard it, or see Riker hear "Picard to Riker", which again establishes only that Riker heard it, not that LaForge next door would not have.
that killing unnecessarily isn’t right?What message? That people die? I wasn't aware that was some sort of sociological message that I needed deep pondering on.
well, it surely used to be. that was one of the main reasons it stood up for many, myself included.Some times.
And I don't think it is necessary. Star Trek is not a vehicle for social change that fans were told that it is.
honestly, this doesn’t happening is oddly convenient many times between late TNG and VOY.Imagine that on the old shows! XD
"Intruder Alert!" - "Computer, beam them all back." - "Transport completed." - "I'll be in my ready room."
been quite a while since that used to happen...But for me, Trek - like all SF settings - is a place we can use allegory to explore the human condition. Or use out-there technologies which can't actually exist to explore consequences we can conceive of, but aren't quite reality yet.
For TOS and TNG, I was planning to pick specific episodes that I could get some mileage out of, but maybe I should move up my cut-off and include DS9 too. It's weird for me, because DS9 was a current series when I was first online, but I guess time marches on. It's "retro"/"nostalgic" now. The "glory days" to quote Jammer.I appreciate this thought because I find myself running into the same issues. I tend to nitpick a lot of newer Trek even though I enjoy it, and I go between “am I being too hard on it?” and “am I going too EASY on it because I want to like it?” all the time.
A lot of the hate I see online doesn’t help, but the other day I was up to “A Call to Arms” on my millionth DS9 rewatch, and I decided to consciously watch it like I would a new Discovery episode, and WOW was I nitpicking the crap out of it, especially the last fifteen minutes or so when the station and the Defiant are under attack.
So for now I’ve kind of settled on, “wow, Discovery is good but has some REALLY questionable writing decisions. Is it better or worse in that regard than other Trek? I think only time will tell.” Because right now older Trek has the virtue of a ton of nostalgia and the fact that most of us have seen each and every episode SO many times, we’ve just accepted the warts that every series has and moved on.
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