Aaaahhhh... six more months of this... 

Aaaahhhh... six more months of this...![]()
Aaaahhhh... six more months of this...![]()
It's been going on long before this... it will go on so long as there are trek fans out there.![]()
Well, I am a "death to Star Trek" kinda guy but only for the reason that I think all stories should be allowed to end. In litSF, Frank Herbert milked Dune for all it was worth, to diminishing returns long before his son and Kevin Anderson exhumed the cow for yet more titty-tugging. I really hope that my all-time favorite tv show--The Sopranos--is as dead as the abrupt ending suggests its hero is. I want no theatrical film, no prequel series, any more than I'd want a Citizen Kane II or a prequel to Hamlet, even if John Updike himself were to write it. Also, I feel people should really think twice before remaking a classic (wouldn't want a remake of Citizen Kane, either, even if it was directed by Ridley Scott or Martin Scorsese and starred Russell Crowe or Daniel Day Lewis--Hamlet, of course, is a different story). The reason why NuBSG is such a marvel is because it took a pretty lousy show and managed to make it into something that advanced SF on televeision as much as Star Trek did back in the sixties. Star Trek was already pretty fucking great--I wouldn't be here if I didn't still list TOS among the best things put on tv.
I find it is next to impossible to say these things around here without being radicalized, pushed into an armed camp and flirting with a flame every third post--which is the fun and shame of the TrekBBS.![]()
And indeed, I would ask why is this film being made? Or rather what purpose does it serve? For those fans out there, do watch Star Trek simply to be entertained, or do you watch it for something far more? Indeed, depending on opinion, this will either be the worst or the best Star Trek film. The smartest or the dumbest. It's all perception.
"I reject your reality and substitute my own." - Adam Savage
From what I know, the movie involves creating a new "timeline" for Trek, so probably not. Insipid idea and a tired plot device.Given that Gene has been dead for quite a bit TGT (and, one suspects, will remain dead), is there any circumstance upon which you could enter any new Star Trek endeavor into your own personal canon?
What concerns me is the idea of rebuilding from scratch, which speaks to lazy writing.
Enterprise and NEM would have both succeeded if the creative teams had taken a few more chances and shown us different aspects of the Trek universe.
I didn't think so. He's coming at this from the POV that's most likely to make it work. He's never been a big Trek fan - well, that's probably good.
Look how well it worked with Berman & Braga.![]()
Look how well it worked with Nick Meyer.
It's a common misconception.What concerns me is the idea of rebuilding from scratch, which speaks to lazy writing.
"Lazy writing" - a term that gets bandied about on this bbs an awful lot.
You really think starting from scratch is lazy? Sounds like bloody hard work to me!
I've never met a creative writer who has said, "Today I shall be lazy and write the easy way." A lazy writer is the one who never meets deadlines and/or never gets published.
Enterprise and NEM would have both succeeded if the creative teams had taken a few more chances and shown us different aspects of the Trek universe.
JJ Abrams is going to show us a "different aspect".
It's a common misconception.What concerns me is the idea of rebuilding from scratch, which speaks to lazy writing.
"Lazy writing" - a term that gets bandied about on this bbs an awful lot.
You really think starting from scratch is lazy? Sounds like bloody hard work to me!
I've never met a creative writer who has said, "Today I shall be lazy and write the easy way." A lazy writer is the one who never meets deadlines and/or never gets published.
JJ Abrams is going to show us a "different aspect".Enterprise and NEM would have both succeeded if the creative teams had taken a few more chances and shown us different aspects of the Trek universe.
Making up new material is less work in the sense that you don't have to concern yourself with what came before. You don't have to research the fictional history of the ST universe, you don't have to be familiar with the the original series or any that came after. Fitting new material into this jigsaw puzzle is challenging. Doing it in a way that remains true to 40 years of Trek lore while being friendly to new audiences is even more so. It's easier just to say "screw it. I'll just start over and see if I can make ST into a pure action adventure film." It's the lazy way out.
If your idea of a "new aspect" is Trek Wars is an alternate timeline, then yeah. I agree completley that this is a fresh take.
Reboots like this one is lazy writing, because all you're doing is piggybacking on an established property while ignoring all the limitations and responsibilities that come with working on an established property, primarily that you don't lie to the audience by taking the "EVERYTHING YOU KNOW IS A LIE!!" approach, i.e., don't go upending the cart and redefining everything "just because you can." You stay true to the established backstory, you sweat out the sniggling details of when Kirk first met Pike, how long Spock served on the Enterprise, what the ship looked like way back when, not because you have to cater to long time fans (even though common courtesy says you should), but because you are working on one tiny part of a much larger whole!
Frankly, I wouldn't be nearly as upset about this if they'd just be upfront and honest about it and just admitted that this is a reboot. I still wouldn't like it, I still wouldn't see it, but at least I wouldn't have the issue of how, for the past year, they have been lying through their teeth to us!
I still wouldn't like what JJ's doing to Star Trek, but at least I'd still have some respect for him. At the moment, I have none.
But they do it respectfully and with an eye towards toeing the line with the established continuity, at least with the original series.
I just wonder how much money they threw at Cawley to turn him from a critic to a cheerleader.
how much money they threw at Cawley to turn him from a critic to a cheerleader.
Give me a fucking break, April. Stop with the shouty boldface, ALL-CAPS bullshit and the superfluous punctuation and show us -- calmly --where Abrams and company are guilty of any of what you're describing. Galen4, you're welcome to do the same thing, and do use something other than the latest Entertainment Weekly article to support your arguments, will you? There are months of interviews and articles available on the movie, and yet this is all you can find? Yeah, that sounds really credible, unless you're only here to stir up shit.Reboots like this one is lazy writing, because all you're doing is piggybacking on an established property while ignoring all the limitations and responsibilities that come with working on an established property, primarily that you don't lie to the audience by taking the "EVERYTHING YOU KNOW IS A LIE!!" approach, i.e., don't go upending the cart and redefining everything "just because you can." You stay true to the established backstory, you sweat out the sniggling details of when Kirk first met Pike, how long Spock served on the Enterprise, what the ship looked like way back when, not because you have to cater to long time fans (even though common courtesy says you should), but because you are working on one tiny part of a much larger whole!
And I'd stop pushing the "lying about the reboot" button right now, if I were you, April. One of our other posters can tell you what happens when you ring that bell too many times.Frankly, I wouldn't be nearly as upset about this if they'd just be upfront and honest about it and just admitted that this is a reboot. I still wouldn't like it, I still wouldn't see it, but at least I wouldn't have the issue of how, for the past year, they have been lying through their teeth to us!
I still wouldn't like what JJ's doing to Star Trek, but at least I'd still have some respect for him. At the moment, I have none.
I just wonder how much money they threw at Cawley to turn him from a critic to a cheerleader.
Look how well it worked with Berman & Braga.![]()
Look how well it worked with Nick Meyer.
This just occured to me: with Meyer, at least, we were lucky (and it was an incredible stroke of luck) that he independently recognized one of the things Roddenberry was shooting for all along: the "Horatio Hornblower in Space" aspect. And thus, he set out to "bring" to Trek what was already there. (I find it funny to hear him congratulate himself on this.)
Abrams thinks Star Trek should be more like Star Wars. I find that troubling, and I've said why elsewhere so I won't belabor it here.
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