Hyperbole. That was delicious.Omg, someone wants to follow up on 21 seasons worth of Trek history, and storylines that are wide open for greater exploration that structural constraints in the 1980s-2000s prevented! Instead we need to beat legacy fans over the head with the idea that their Star Trek is dead, and needs to be remade for... the CW audience with an HBO level budget!
No. It's just not the first, second, third, fourth, fifth or sixth drawing item for Trek for me. It's not hatred to be less than enthused by a project promising nostalgia and nothing else.Some people really love Star Trek but really seem to hate any kind of continuity and building up on established history.
All content is perfectly disposable content. Meaning is made by the viewer not shared history as such. You can use continuity as a beautiful tool to weave in and out of prior themes, or build something new.Some people especially seem to enjoy Star Trek history being "deconstructed" because they don't want any kind of baggage or history, and want things set in the infinite present where the past and future don't matter. For me, that's just perfectly disposable content.
Exactly so. It's not continuity that's the problem; it's the idea of stagnation within that continuity. That the only way to tell these stories is for the characters to remain exactly the same and to be where they were before (i.e. a starship captain with the same crew.)It's facile to suggest that the only way to tell more stories about a character is to dwell on their past. That makes no sense. People grow and change over their lives. Picard was not the same person on the Enterprise that he'd been on the Stargazer, so why the hell would you expect a story about Picard 20 years later to be about the same Picard in the same kind of stories? That's not the only way to do more with a character, it's just the lazy, sucky way. Season 1 had the right idea, with some flaws in execution. But seasons 2 & 3 responded to those flaws in the wrong way, by throwing the baby out with the bathwater, deciding that boldly going where the story and characters hadn't gone before had been a mistake, and retreating to the safe, timid option of pandering to familiarity.
Legacy, if born out the way that Matalas wants it, will be more of the same. Characters will not change. The galaxy will not change. The ship's crew will be all these name dropped characters to say "See, it's totally like the last time and this is they're family!"