Yes, Dr. Who has been around in some form or other, off and on, since '63, but I'd still argue it isn't as pervasive and as recognized as TOS.
It is in England. It's not the show's fault that most of us Yanks are behind the curve.

Yes, Dr. Who has been around in some form or other, off and on, since '63, but I'd still argue it isn't as pervasive and as recognized as TOS.
I was thinking that I should watch "The Menagerie" with my friend because I think she'd get a real kick out of seeing the original backstory on Pike and how he came to occupy his particular niche in Trek mythology.
BTW, guys, I appreciate the kind words - I just have nothing to add in my defense because I find it awkward and probably unseemly to participate in a discussion of me. I'd rather discuss the significance of avocado gold in 1960s fashion and home furnishings.
One can argue about the zeniths and the nadirs of TOS, but the simple fact that it's still being debated after more than forty years later is still a pretty good testament to the totality of the series. It's definitely not just more run-of-the-mill sci-fi or else it would have faded into near obscurity with all the other stuff of the '60s and '70s and '80s.
No other science fiction oriented television work has been with us constantly and been assimilated into the collective consciosness since its inception unto today as TOS has.
Yes, Dr. Who has been around in some form or other, off and on, since '63, but I'd still argue it isn't as pervasive and as recognized as TOS.
It is in England. It's not the show's fault that most of us Yanks are behind the curve.![]()
Since its a nickname and not his real name, that doesn't work. Enterprise is not an analog to Bones. That would be the E, the Big E, Enty, Redshirts Graveyard or any other nickname for the ship.I raised this point in the Trek XI forum. The movie was just *dumb* and it is no better exemplified than in the scene which explains the origins of the "Bones" nickname.
It took me a while to think of a good analogy to illustrate how retarded that scene truly was, but I think I've got it:
Picture an Admiral and his staff at a meeting surveying the completion of Starfleet's newest starship:
Admiral: "Ahh, there she is. The pride of the fleet, our flagship. But NCC-1701 needs a real name. Hmmm... so, is there an enterprising soul in this room who can help me think of a na... a-ha!!!"
Oh, I enjoyed the "all I've got left is my bones" implied origin for McCoy's nickname. There was never anything so especially interesting or clever in the previous implied origin that we're losing anything by its being replaced.
Well, I do know that I've gotten a great deal more entertainment and sheer delight out of Davies' version of Doctor Who than I have the last twenty years of Star Trek.
I don't know that I've ever much criticized Jefferies' finished design work, which I admire greatly (I don't like that globe ship that people call the "Daedalus" very much, but you know what - Jefferies evidently wasn't satisfied either...he moved on). I'm dubious that a direct updating of a lot of it would have worked very well for this movie. One thing they were explicitly looking to bring to Star Trek was a sense of scale that it's never delivered in the theater (and that includes ST:TMP, grand as it was in some respects).
How well or badly TOS is aging at this point doesn't have all that much to do with the sets or the costumes, and that's not what I was talking about.
I'd have been personally happy, for emotional reasons, to see visual design a great deal more like TOS than they used in this film, but it doesn't follow that I'm unhappy or disappointed that they did something different...as someone noted around here a few weeks ago, neither Abrams nor any other human being would make a Star Trek movie exactly the way I want it to be; that's not a world we live in. I try not to react to entertainment based on the extent to which the creators deliver on my specific prior expectations.
The things that I actively dislike, visually, about the movie are relatively few and they're no more rationally arrived at than the things that I do like.
I value my own opinion first, but of course enjoy bantering with others or I wouldn't be on this message board...but I cannot subsribe to what you said:
"so if he says the way the episodes are put together is dated, I'll bow to his expertise". So just because he said so.... you yield to that? What do you think yourself....each to our own...I want to know what you think!
On the whole do you think the directing/editing/pacing is becoming more grueling to bear over time?
Please don't get offended...but both Brutal and you sound like your ass kissing this said poster!
It's funny, but the most successful communication of the size of the Enterprise in my opinion was done by our own Tallguy:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tq0wVRuUFLk
I doubt either of us...can be said to truly like the other.
I am.I doubt either of us...can be said to truly like the other.
You're not beyond the bounds of tolerable company.![]()
I am.I doubt either of us...can be said to truly like the other.
You're not beyond the bounds of tolerable company.![]()
I took a group of neighborhood kids to see it a week or two later and this time was prepared for something very different, and was able to enjoy it.
I doubt either of us...can be said to truly like the other.
You're not beyond the bounds of tolerable company.![]()
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