Discovery is doing it. Star Trek is an action/adventure platform with an optimistic view of human capability (note: not outcome) with social commentary woven in, both subtlety and unsubtly at times. That's it.
TOS certainly had a mix of all of those endings, especially early on. And Kirk was hardly the best of humanity...and he knew it.
Recently it strikes me that "Star Trek" means "TNG."
Because fans have a narrow definition of canon.Those shows are still in production and neither have achieved anything close to mainstream acceptance by the fans. Why do you think that is?
Here's the thing-even if TNG is what Trek ought to be that doesn't meant that is the only thing it can be. And TOS is Star Trek too, correct? So, Discovery taking references from TOS as well as TNG and DS9, who both did very dark stories, humans acting poorly, evil admirals, and poor decisions. The only optimism presented at times was that our heroes were not as bad as other Starfleet officers. Star Trek is a huge sandbox, not a TNG sized one.You've got me there. I've seen very little of TOS besides all of the movies. I do think TNG is the epitome of what Star Trek ought to be, and based on the original cast films I don't see much conflict between the original cast (in the films) and TOS.
By and large I am not. I am here to talk excitedly with friends about things I love.We're here to debate.
Nor are they here. But, we, the audience, are actually treated more intelligently and not spoon fed the answer.The core tenants of what made Star Trek Star Trek were not violated there.
The Roger Moore Bond movies were full of slapstick humor and were well loved by fans.It's not just TNG though, I also liked DS9 and Voyager (and to a lesser extent Enterprise and occasionally Lower Decks).
DS9 especially did some great storylines about the not so admirable aspects of the federation, but it was never the focus of the show. The core tenants of what made Star Trek Star Trek were not violated there. Our heroes always fought for what was right, and if they ever did something morally questionable (like tricking the Romulans into war) it was done intelligently and with appropriate moral reflection.
But to your point, discussing what star trek ought to be is the whole point of this discussion. I mean, we could just call everything Star Trek and discuss comparative quality, but that's kind of boring. What if the next James Bond film was a romantic comedy filled with slapstick humor? Like, say James Bond's date tripps over a big pink dildo and lands in a pile of dog poop and the camera pans in on his Bond's as he says "now that's what I call sticky situation."
I think that would piss off a lot of James Bond fans, and they'd have a right to debate whether it was ever a "true" bond film at all. That sense of whether a new component of a franchise has any right to be considered a legitimate part of the larger story is a valid discussion to have.
Yep.TOS didn't even have those. A lot of episodes ended sadly or with tragedy, barely redeemed by the crew learning lessons about humanity and how civilized beings should behave to one another.
DS9 especially did some great storylines about the not so admirable aspects of the federation, but it was never the focus of the show. The core tenants of what made Star Trek Star Trek were not violated there. Our heroes always fought for what was right, and if they ever did something morally questionable (like tricking the Romulans into war) it was done intelligently and with appropriate moral reflection.
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