Do I like the new ship design? No. But that doesn't mean that this is going to be a bad movie or that I have to feel threatened by it. It just means that it has a different aesthetic than I do. There's no reason I can't enjoy Star Trek XI on its own terms, and no reason for the rest of the franchise's integrity to feel threatened.
And I agree.
I'm just arguing why the ship was changed just for the sake of changing it to appeal to more people (which assumes that people will only go see movies because of the flash)? Why couldn't the original design just be brushed up
a little bit and brought to the big screen? Why did it need to be radically redesigned?
If you ask most people on the street, I doubt they would consider it a radical re-design. Abrams brought a new aesthetic to the film, and it's one that you and I personally don't like. That's fine.
But you could just as easily ask, "Why
would he keep the old design aesthetic? What's so inherently good about it? Why
shouldn't he try something new?"
It's a completely arbitrary choice either way. It's solely based on personal preference. You and I obviously prefer one, and he prefers another. Neither one is logically any better than the other.
I'm just trying to get my head around the silly notion that things needed to be changed just to "appeal" to people (motorcycle/car driving Kirk in the Iowa prairie,
..... what's so "changed" about that? What's wrong with that? It's not like ground transportation is just going to disappear in two hundred years.
I mean, yeah the same-old, same-old with Trek hasn't been working on TV or film lately but that had nothing to do with ship design.
Maybe not. But if they're changing some stuff, why not everything? Why shouldn't a new creative team bring in a new aesthetic? You might as well ask why the Broadway revival of
Cabaret had a completely different set design, costumes, and staging concept from the original, or why anyone would take Shakespeare and give it a modern setting instead of the original Elizabethan. The watch-word really is
evolution. Trek is evolving. We may not always agree on the specific choices, but there's nothing wrong with the essential principle of just completely reinterpreting and changing everything.
And, yeah, much of the stuff (ok a LOT of the stuff) with TOS wouldn't translate at all to the big screen. But they kept the general look of the unifroms, the miniskirts, Chekov's "W's" in his speech, but the ship design would've just been too much?
I actually agree with you -- I don't agree with that specific choice. But I don't question the logic behind the idea of them feeling free to re-interpret everything, and I don't presume that the original is objectively superior.
I can accept some changes, I can.... :hard swallow: "buy" the Enterprise (or a starship) being built in an Iowa cornfield.
There is absolutely no indication that the
Enterprise was being built in an Iowa cornfield. Abrams has said that the Kirk-on-Earth parts of the trailer take place both in Iowa and in San Francisco, and even if he hadn't, there's no reason to think from the tailer that it was Iowa. It's not like ground transportation would only exist in Riverside.
I can buy a young Kirk James Deaning around on a motorcycle or an even younger Kirk fleeing from the police in a Corvette.
How is that even a change? If anything, it's wholly consistent with what we know about Kirk's character and childhood -- he had a haunted childhood, he saw thousands of people murdered on Tarsus IV, he's obsessed and fixated on starship command and escaping the bounds of Earth, and he has a longstanding habit of defying authority when it suits him. That Kirk might have had a troubled adolescence is perfectly consistent with that.
I just really, really, wish they used the original series' design. I mean, it would've just brought tears to my eyes to see that thing beautifuly, artfuly, detailed-ily rendered in all her glory for the big screen. I mean it could've just been... awesome. I don't see or understand why they took a classic, loved, design and decided to mix it up so drasticly.
I personally would have preferred to see the TOS version, too. But really, why, objectively-speaking, would that have been superior? Why would that have meant anything to anyone other than a hardcore TOS fan?
Keeping or not keeping the old design? It's an arbitrary choice either way. And besides, like I said, a hell of a lot of people who are not One Of Us would probably say that the design isn't even different enough for them to notice.