Blue_Ranger
Lieutenant
Ah...so you've seen the movie then?
Maybe, maybe not. But either way, why not try something new? Because some whiney fanboys on the Internet feel that one fictional production somehow "invalidates" previous fictional productions? Not good enough.
Creativity is superior to stagnation. Doing something new is preferable to playing by the rules.
Actually, it is funny... you have worked so hard to talk about larger works that lack internal continuity, but I get the feeling that you have no idea what the benefits of that internal continuity actually brings with it.
Maybe (and this is just a guess) you are being this dismissive because your only point is to defend what you've said and to keep the fight going...
First, look at your examples. They are all set in a fictional present day.
So why is continuity great? I'm assuming by your dismissive nature of those of us who like continuity that you yourself have no idea,
To you, based on your arguments, Star Trek is a disposable piece of pop culture.
Why do we need a new timeline for that? Why do we need an overly bright and cluttered bridge for that? Why do we need a funky stylized Enterprise for that?
Tom (and everyone else who keeps tossing out this bogus argument)... please stop pretending that people who make this argument "don't know the difference between fantasy and reality."Are u insane? The aircraft carriers in Pearl Harbor were REAL SHIPS, WITH REAL HISTORY! They actually happened. Thats why the ships they used in Pearl Harbor were wrong, especially since they were not flattop carriers like the Japanese used.
The Enterprise is a fictional ship. JJ can do whatever the fuck he wants with it, and it will not effect actual history in any way.
That's either an indication that you don't understand the argument being made, or (and this is much worse) it's a LIE... an attempt to mock an argument rather than addressing it.
In case it's the first option - here's the simple version: The issue is not about "accurate portrayal of real events." Nobody has ever claimed that. And every time someone pretends that people are claiming that, it's a distraction from the real point.
The issue is "willful suspension of disbelief." Ever heard the term?
This is why consistency is important. The audience, in order to be drawn into a dramatic story, needs to be able to forget, and not be constantly reminded, that "what you are watching is a bunch of SoCal kids playing make-believe on a stage someplace."
While you're watching the movie, or the tv show... you need to be able to believe, even if only for the two hours you're sitting there, that what you're seeing is important. You need to CARE.
We all know that Zach Quinto isn't really Spock... and that Leonard Nimoy isn't really Spock. But we care about what happens to the fictional character of Spock while we watch the TV show or the movie or whatever... don't we?
Here's the problem. And this is why people keep bringing this up. Every thing you see that's wrong... with "wrong" being defined as "in direct conflict with something you already are aware of"... you are reminded that "this movie is nothing but a bunch of Socal kids hanging out on plywood and plexiglass sets just outside of Los Angeles."
If you see a WWII movie... and let me say that again... "MOVIE"... aka "form of entertainment, not an actual historical documentary using real footage shot at the time"... where something isn't correct, you are drawn out of your ability to suspend your disbelief in THAT MOVIE. Doesn't mean you don't believe in WWII. But you don't believe in the movie anymore.
And here... if you see something that's "wrong"... that doesn't agree with the Star Trek you know... you're also, similarly, drawn out of your ability to suspend your disbelief in the movie. Doesn't mean that "Star Trek" would be somehow "real" if the movie doesn't do that, though, does it?
The "you guys are morons cuz you think Star Trek is real" argument is BULLSHIT. And everyone who's ever used it knows damned well that it's nothing other than bullshit.
So please... knock it off.
No, its not BULLSHIT, and I will defend a valid argument. When I watch a WWII movie that claims to be based on actual events the accuracy of the film is important to me. I love WWII history, and if the movie claims to be accurate, and it is not, THEN I am pulled out of the movie.
Wrong. Given 23rd century Trek technology, there's no reason whatsoever it could not be built, mostly, on the ground. Even Roddenberry theorized it was so. It DOES allow for a cool scene, but it is not scientifically inaccurate, any more than is building it in a vacuum from the keel up.This isn't continuity, this is idiocy, stupidity, and scientifically as inaccurate as you can get. It has no substance, it's just a a kewl scene of Kirk driving up to it with his motor cycle, envoking umpteenth other movies having done the same. The substance is gone, it's just style.
Another orbital drydock scene adds no "substance" to the drama either.
"Oh but we'll probably really build big spaceships that way! It makes more sense."
Maybe. Mainly what it does is make some folks watching the movie feel smart because they appreciate what they believe to be "scientific accuracy" in the movie, without adding a thing of value to the movie itself.
Scientific accuracy IS a value that is added to the movie. It is one of the most IMPORTANT values in fact added to the movie. We want to watch Science Fiction, not Star Wars.
The phrase, of course, was "what they believe to be scientific accuracy."
Once you swallow inertial and gravity control on the level that "Star Trek" uses it, fussing about where the ship is built is straining at gnats. But it helps people to feel like they're watching something "smart" without really requiring anything of them.
Scientific accuracy IS a value that is added to the movie. It is one of the most IMPORTANT values in fact added to the movie. We want to watch Science Fiction, not Star Wars.
No it's not. Thematic and character content is far more important than scientific accuracy. By your logic, we shouldn't have FTL drive on Star Trek since current scientific theory finds the concept impossible.
I don't, not even ffing close. Indeed, the sight just makes me laugh my ass off at the sheer stupidity of the visual.Personally, I think that the emotional content of seeing a young Kirk staring up at a starship being built and longing for a life among the stars more than justifies whatever scientific implausibility there is to them building a ship on Earth.
No, the key words are "science" and "fiction", fiction using a future science.This is art, not an engineering manuel. The key word in "Science Fiction" is still fiction.
:sighs:
The phrase, of course, was "what they believe to be scientific accuracy."
Once you swallow inertial and gravity control on the level that "Star Trek" uses it, fussing about where the ship is built is straining at gnats. But it helps people to feel like they're watching something "smart" without really requiring anything of them.
:sighs:
Nope.
You see, all those inertial and gravity control, COSTS ENERGY.
No it's not. Thematic and character content is far more important than scientific accuracy. By your logic, we shouldn't have FTL drive on Star Trek since current scientific theory finds the concept impossible.
No, current scientific theory finds that the warp drive a fully functional scientific theory.
And no, even if it weren't, it still would not be true. Because there's a difference between projecting into the future certain unknowable scientific breakthroughs, and outright breaking all laws of physics and logic.
Personally, I think that the emotional content of seeing a young Kirk staring up at a starship being built and longing for a life among the stars more than justifies whatever scientific implausibility there is to them building a ship on Earth.
I don't, not even ffing close. Indeed, the sight just makes me laugh my ass off at the sheer stupidity of the visual.
No, the key words are "science" and "fiction", fiction using a future science.This is art, not an engineering manuel. The key word in "Science Fiction" is still fiction.
Well, that tells us, doesn't it? Since the setting is all pretend, and the characters are all pretend, and the themes are all pretend (pretentious?)---why, you've convinced me. I'm passing on the movie. I'll wait til it shows up on the library shelf, and watch it for free.
:sighs:
People who can propel starships at FTL speeds across interstellar space using matter/antimatter annihilation don't have to worry about having enough energy to do anything they please.
No, they show the scientific accuracy of Star Trek, because newsflash, when it comes energy production methods, matter/anti-matter isn't actually all that much. Sounds odd, but it's the truth. You would need to annihilate an entire planet worth of matter and anti-matter to produce the energy needed to warp space and time. In short, matter / anti-matter will run out INCREDIBLY quickly. The real power comes from subspace reaction in the warp coils - hence why you can also power warp coils with fusion reactor, even though you won't be going so fast.Instances in "Star Trek" where they run short on energy are simply examples of Trek's failure to be internally consistent.
The phrase, of course, was "what they believe to be scientific accuracy."
Once you swallow inertial and gravity control on the level that "Star Trek" uses it, fussing about where the ship is built is straining at gnats. But it helps people to feel like they're watching something "smart" without really requiring anything of them.
:sighs:
Nope.
You see, all those inertial and gravity control, COSTS ENERGY.
1) Yes, relativity theory tells us that as we approach c, the energy requirements increase exponentially, and it requires more energy than exists in all the universe to reach c itself. Ergo, it requires far less energy to do something like lift a starship off from the ground than it does to travel faster than the speed of light.
2) No, it doesn't actually cost energy because it's NOT REAL. It's ALL PRETEND. So there's no reason not to pretend that the ship was built on Earth, too!
Fine by me. I just get pissed at people trying to spread their closed-mindedness to everyone else.
:sighs:
People who can propel starships at FTL speeds across interstellar space using matter/antimatter annihilation don't have to worry about having enough energy to do anything they please.
Actually they do, because everything that costs energy, costs energy.
I just wish BSG gives us a good ending.
Don't hold your breath. According to EJO, it's gonna be a downer. I really hope he's kidding.
Fine by me. I just get pissed at people trying to spread their closed-mindedness to everyone else.![]()
No, the key words, would be "science fiction". You see, the adjective MODIFIES the noun, to be given added properties, and demands. It's modifier.No it's not. Thematic and character content is far more important than scientific accuracy. By your logic, we shouldn't have FTL drive on Star Trek since current scientific theory finds the concept impossible.
No, current scientific theory finds that the warp drive a fully functional scientific theory.
And no, even if it weren't, it still would not be true. Because there's a difference between projecting into the future certain unknowable scientific breakthroughs, and outright breaking all laws of physics and logic.
Not really. Pretend is pretend.
If you want to pretend so much, go watch Star Wars, and leave us Star Trek.
Then don't watch the movie and go and watch something more scientifically plausible. Like that episode of TOS where the Enterprise encounters a giant space amoeba. Or the Greek god Apollo. Or where the aliens steal Spock's brain.
No. The key word is "fiction." That's the noun. The "Science" in "Science Fiction" is an adjective modifying the noun. It's right there in the rules of grammar.No, the key words are "science" and "fiction", fiction using a future science.This is art, not an engineering manuel. The key word in "Science Fiction" is still fiction.
People who can propel starships at FTL speeds across interstellar space using matter/antimatter annihilation don't have to worry about having enough energy to do anything they please.
Actually they do, because everything that costs energy, costs energy.
No, because such technology guarantees that they can always have as much energy available as they wish.
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