I frankly admit that I come too much from a TNG angle. Everything that's great about Star Trek to me is the original stuff you don't encounter in other science-fiction. Adventure, fist-fights and holodecks are generic, Prime Directive and an utopian future with a military-exploratory agency are Trek-specific.
You know, at the risk of going out on a limb, I've always had the sneaky suspicion that a good percentage of the people who have issues with the new movie probably grew up on TNG, not TOS. Which is why, as an old-school Trekkie, I tend to roll my eyes when people keep condemning the new movie for not being as cerebral, sophisticated, and high-minded as . . . TOS?
Don't get me wrong. A good part of
Star Trek's appeal is its fundamental optimism, but it's also supposed to be a fun, exciting, swashbuckling space adventure, with vivid, colorful characters. Who don't always behave like proper Starfleet officers.
And, to be honest, I'm not sure that
Star Trek was ever meant to be a testament to the fundamental importance of "social discipline." I suspect that Dr. McCoy would snort heartily at that notion:
"You seem to be deriving pleasure from transgressive behavior, doctor."
"Damn right I am, you cold-blooded, pointy-eared computer!"