It's not uncommon to look down upon the past. We look down upon the 1950s. I hope people in the future look down upon the 2020s. The times we're living in are pretty messed up.
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We will never see a return to that extreme form of optimism in STAR TREK (or fiction in general) ever again.
9/11 made sure of that.
At best, we'll see little glimmers of it.
We will never see a return to that extreme form of optimism in STAR TREK (or fiction in general) ever again. 9/11 made sure of that. At best, we'll see little glimmers of it.
I think TNG's "The Drumhead" and DS9's "Homefront/Paradise Lost" touch on this when they show what the lack of trust and paranoia will due to the organizations that say they are to protect the people. The only way to find peace in that is to build trust within communities, and reach out to larger communities to build more and more trust. We can't rely just on organizations to promote peace; we have to build it.In a way, TOS was glorifying the American military for ending WW2...and yes, we had not been attacked on our own soil for a very long time before 9-11.
But in the absence of war or a specific external enemy, it seems the US turns against itself, with extreme political divisiveness and random violence toward its own citizens. If Trek has ever shown the Federation coping successfully with that issue, I have not been aware of it. How can there be any optimism for world peace with those two evils as alternatives.
Disagree. I think the premier episode of Strange New Worlds does exactly that. That was its mission, explicitly. It took the bull by the horns, set World War III as something in the (possible) future of the audience, and established the people of the 23rd century as having found a hopeful future that they can share with other beings who are in danger of making similar mistakes.We will never see a return to that extreme form of optimism in STAR TREK (or fiction in general) ever again.
9/11 made sure of that.
At best, we'll see little glimmers of it.
The characters had a certain disdain for earlier eras in those series, but we also see that in TOS - at least in the movies. (For example, Kirk calling 20th century San Fransisco 'An extremely primitive and paranoid culture.').
Disagree. I think the premier episode of Strange New Worlds does exactly that. That was its mission, explicitly. It took the bull by the horns, set World War III as something in the (possible) future of the audience, and established the people of the 23rd century as having found a hopeful future that they can share with other beings who are in danger of making similar mistakes.
The implication therefore is that we, the people in the real world, can avoid the nightmare scenario. If that's not optimism, what is?
If anything, I think First Contact went out of its way to deconstruct it. Lily comes right out and calls "bullshit" on everything Picard says, and then he goes into an all-out fit of rage.^I felt that was likely, that's why I added 'at least in the movies'. They were a different thing from TOS as a series (' We can admit that we're killers, but we're not going to kill today') - as much as the TNG movies were different from the TNG series.
TNG and later series of the Berman era may have had it as an undertone, but I think it only was truly insufferable or 'sterile' in the early TNG era (also with some outliers), and they corrected it.
I'm pretty sure that was Lower Decks.I believe the production also said that they weren't going to adhere to previous Trek's one season equals a year of in-universe time.
We will never see a return to that extreme form of optimism in STAR TREK (or fiction in general) ever again.
9/11 made sure of that.
At best, we'll see little glimmers of it.
Well, we have prominent cast and creators (Sir Patrick) telling us that this is no time for optimism. Ahem. YOU LIVED THROUGH THE SECOND WORLD WAR!
This is how I feel... I think we won't see that in fiction, if ever for a long, long time. 9/11 kind of put the nail in the coffin for optimism in fiction
I was actually thinking of the latter. I know he didn't fight in the war and that he was a child, but I can't imagine that he wasn't affected by it in very real ways like you describe. Hence my sense of astonishment at the attitude of "This was all well and good back in the day but things are BAD now."And bear in mind that winning World War II, while a matter of a great deal of pride, was not exactly the source of nostalgia and optimism for the United Kingdom that it was for the United States. The U.S. didn't suffer from the Blitz the way the U.K. did. The earliest memories of many Britons who lived through World War II as children include being terrified of dying in the Blitz every night.
Absolutely!I mean, c'mon. If the worst war in human history didn't stop Star Trek from being made twenty years later, why would 9/11 stop optimistic fiction from being made twenty years later?
There has been plenty of hopeful, optimistic fiction written and produced since 9/11. Finding Nemo. Spider-Man 2. The Avengers. The Incredibles. Star Wars: The Force Awakens. WALL-E. Up. Iron Man. Paddington and Paddington 2. Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse. Moana. Encanto. Hamilton: An American Musical. Once Upon A Time in Hollywood. Jojo Rabbit. Little Women. Darkest Hour. The Post. The Fabelmans. The Martian. Selma. Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance). Argo. Django Unchained. Lincoln. The Artist. The King's Speech. The Aviator. Bridgerton. Community. Leverage. Only Murders in the Building. Ted Lasso. The Orville. Schitt's Creek. Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt. Glee. The Big Bang Theory. Modern Family. Parks and Recreation. How I Met Your Mother. Mean Girls. Frozen. School of Rock. Matilda: The Musical. Wicked. The Book of Mormon. In the Heights. Hairspray: The Musical. Doctor Who. Incredibles 2. Thor. Thor: Ragnarok. Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl. Mama Mia! Eureka. Warehouse 13. Tangled. Knives Out. Glass Onion. Love Actually. Inside Out. Love, Simon. The F Word/What If. Hugo. The Way Way Back. Safety Not Guaranteed. Easy A. Pitch Perfect. Ponyo. The Wind Rises. Ratatouille.
And that is an extremely limited selection!
I mean, c'mon. If the worst war in human history didn't stop Star Trek from being made twenty years later, why would 9/11 stop optimistic fiction from being made twenty years later?
As @plynch noted the optimism was that we survived and worked together.I think what we all mean is that hopeful vision of the future that we got in TOS and early TNG before DS9 came along and we get the Darker trek
As @plynch noted the optimism was that we survived and worked together.
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