I'm pretty sure that it was aimed at an adult audience when the show was in production, though failure to account for the under-21 (or under-18?) demographic in compiling viewer ratings was part of what led to the show's move to a less-desirable time-slot and eventual cancellation for low ratings.Fifty-somethings in the room, be honest: how many of YOUR PARENTS got into Star Trek around the same time you did?
NuTrek gets flamed by adult fans who have forgotten that TOS wasn't originally all that popular with adults in the first place.
That said, Star Trek was weekly viewing for the whole family in our house.
That why I laugh when some fans try to claim (about TOS) -- "Star Trek was NEVER about action/adventure; and was ALWAYS 'socially relevant...'; as that ISN'T true. There's plenty of episodes where 'action/adventure' is the drux of the story <-- And nothing wrong with that (IMO).
BTW - I love TOS. IMO for me it's still the BEST series in what has become 'the franchise' - and yes, it like everything else was never perfect; but I take the good, the bad, and the ridiculous as part of the whole entertaining package - and I love it for what it actually is, and not what GR (and some more modern fans who take some entertainment TOO seriously) likes to claim it is.
That why I feel 'Star Trek' (2009) and 'Star Trek Into Darkness' are a good, fun, and entertaining update/modernization of old school TOS because both films DID do a good job of incorporating everything that made the original TOS enjoyable for me over the years.
I was 12 when it premiered on NBC. My parents had no interest in it, thinking it pretty childish. The only episode my dad liked was "A Piece Of The Action" because it took some of the stuffing out of the characters.
Since I get the feeling you are more of the action adventure persuasion, I can understand why you feel like that. But since I also value the message of hope for the future (etc) implicit in much of TOS, I would regard ST09 as "anti-Trek" (despite the healing hands of time). STiD however is, relatively speaking, a massive improvement in that department, in my view.
I've read that all science fiction was regarded as childish by most people back then (probably still is by many today!), whether intended to be or not.
I've read that all science fiction was regarded as childish by most people back then (probably still is by many today!), whether intended to be or not.
Intention doesn't count for much.
I've read that all science fiction was regarded as childish by most people back then (probably still is by many today!), whether intended to be or not.
Intention doesn't count for much.
I know that's a rhetorical question, but the answer is:I've read that all science fiction was regarded as childish by most people back then (probably still is by many today!), whether intended to be or not.
Intention doesn't count for much.
Delivery does. If it hadn't been a show that was capable of outings like "The Conscience of the King," who would give a shit about anything related to it today?
And you think THAT'S what most people find memorable about Star Trek? Really??
Be honest with yourself . . .
"Balance of Terror" was just a bastardization of a well-known war movie and Devil in the Dark was a monster story with a Rod Serling twist.
Corbomite Maneuver, Arena, The Enterprise Incident, Elaan of Troyus, Space Seed, Immunity Syndrome...
Since I get the feeling you are more of the action adventure persuasion, I can understand why you feel like that. But since I also value the message of hope for the future (etc) implicit in much of TOS, I would regard ST09 as "anti-Trek" (despite the healing hands of time). STiD however is, relatively speaking, a massive improvement in that department, in my view.
I don't mind the messages that ST has clumsily tried to communicate over the years. But I want to be entertained first and foremost. If it isn't entertaining then why am I watching?
I've read that all science fiction was regarded as childish by most people back then (probably still is by many today!), whether intended to be or not.
Intention doesn't count for much.
I dunno, Jake. When you ask questions that imply nobody would give a shit about Star Trek if it wasn't capable of "outings like Conscience of the King" you're pretty strongly implying that there's something uniquely memorable about that episode, and that if it HADN'T been for that episode (or others like it) nobody would care about Star Trek.Yes, that one episode. Nothing else at all. I wasn't using it as an example or anything. Scout's honor.
lol what?In the future, goalposts will be equipped with warp drive! What technology!"Balance of Terror" was just a bastardization of a well-known war movie and Devil in the Dark was a monster story with a Rod Serling twist.
"High concept" is what the execs at Paramount would have called "a little too cerebral" when describing an episode like "The Cage" or "City on the Edge of Forever." Intricate, thought-provoking storylines that make a very interesting point.A group of episodes we're going to lump together as supposedly comparably "low-concept" for no particular reason other than rhetorical convenience.Corbomite Maneuver, Arena, The Enterprise Incident, Elaan of Troyus, Space Seed, Immunity Syndrome...
Of course not. That's exactly my point: the "more" it brought to the table wasn't sophistication or depth, because the lion's share of its fans weren't looking for that and generally weren't paying attention when they saw it. The coolness factor is the biggest draw by far, especially among casual fans who aren't that deep into Trek fandom to tease out some of its hidden treasures (e.g. the few really good, non-hammy scenes of "Conscience of the King").Come on, TOS served up many a fine slice of cheese, but be honest with yourself: nobody would care decades on if that was all it had brought it to the table.
Lots of people wouldn't, hence America's depressingly high divorce rate.Since I get the feeling you are more of the action adventure persuasion, I can understand why you feel like that. But since I also value the message of hope for the future (etc) implicit in much of TOS, I would regard ST09 as "anti-Trek" (despite the healing hands of time). STiD however is, relatively speaking, a massive improvement in that department, in my view.
I don't mind the messages that ST has clumsily tried to communicate over the years. But I want to be entertained first and foremost. If it isn't entertaining then why am I watching?
Look at it this way: Suppose you went home to your wife and although she looked the same, she said things and and acted in ways that were contrary to what you valued about her as a person. Would you be able to ignore that and just be happy that she was still fun to be with?
By trying to remember how Star Trek looked the FIRST time you saw it, not how it looked the four hundred and thirtieth time after years and years of growing up and maturing with it.I.e. If a movie contradicts something I see as important to the character of ST, how can I be entertained by the result?
Yes, because "social bias" is the main reason people thought Star Trek was childish....what I am saying is that due to a social bias you can't assume any particular science fiction work is childish just because it may have been viewed as such.
Currently nuUhura is irritative, sometimes stupid chatacter, if you are a true Trekkie.
There are certain very specific ways in which "related to TOS" would NOT be a good thing. Uhura's characterization is definitely one of them.But as I said, Reboot is good and enjoyable, if you don't think about it as something, which is related to TOS.
I dunno, Jake. When you ask questions that imply nobody would give a shit about Star Trek if it wasn't capable of "outings like Conscience of the King" you're pretty strongly implying that there's something uniquely memorable about that episode, and that if it HADN'T been for that episode (or others like it) nobody would care about Star Trek.
[
"Conscience of the King" is better known to TOS fans under the working title "That one episode, I forget the name, right before Balance of Terror that nobody ever watches."
...
Be honest with yourself: the coolest TOS episodes were not particularly deep or sophisticated. "Balance of Terror" was just a bastardization of a well-known war movie and Devil in the Dark was a monster story with a Rod Serling twist
...
And if Star Trek had waited forty years to follow up its series with a major motion picture, it would be as popular as Lost in Space right about now. Which is to say, pretty popular, just not as big as it now is.I dunno, Jake. When you ask questions that imply nobody would give a shit about Star Trek if it wasn't capable of "outings like Conscience of the King" you're pretty strongly implying that there's something uniquely memorable about that episode, and that if it HADN'T been for that episode (or others like it) nobody would care about Star Trek.
And I stand by that. There were a ton of episodes like it: episodes that adapted material from other genres (the spy thriller, the murder mystery, the courtroom drama, the submarine thriller, the sword-and-sandals movie) into SF and used it to build stories a hell of a lot more sophisticated -- "low-concept" or not (I'll leave that tangent alone for now) -- than you got from Lost in Space or Flash Gordon.
All good points, all entirely true.Of course the use of concepts from contemporary SF literature or original work by SF writers (Arena, Where No Man Has Gone Before, City at the Edge of Forever) also helped. But I'd say that adaptation-from-the-broader-genre-landscape was the more common feature of TOS Trek.
And if Star Trek had waited forty years to follow up its series with a major motion picture, it would be as popular as Lost in Space right about now. Which is to say, pretty popular, just not as big as it now is.
I didn't say it was unsophisticated and I didn't say it was meaningless.[
"Conscience of the King" is better known to TOS fans under the working title "That one episode, I forget the name, right before Balance of Terror that nobody ever watches."
...
Be honest with yourself: the coolest TOS episodes were not particularly deep or sophisticated. "Balance of Terror" was just a bastardization of a well-known war movie and Devil in the Dark was a monster story with a Rod Serling twist
...
I am a TOS fan and I think Conscience of the King is a good episode. I don't think of it as filler.
While I don't think of TOS as 'Citizen Cane' material I don't think its as unsophisticated and meaningless as you make out.
You sure about that?As others have pointed out its not going to have fans 50 years later if its all explosions and action/adventure.
OTOH, despite being more sophisticated and FAR more prolific from a production standpoint Star Trek is not quite as popular or as well-known as Star Wars.
It was the fun, not the sophistication.
And it bears repeating that, strictly speaking, TOS wasn't actually that sophisticated.
And all of which went ENTIRELY over the heads of everyone who saw Star Trek for the very first time and hasn't spent most of their adult life learning how those stories actually took shape.
And it was the TNG movies that ultimately tanked the franchise. And it was an ill-conceived, poorly-done TNG cameo that hailed the death of its television presence.Anyway its the TNG fans who contend its the sophisticated and meaningful Star Trek.![]()
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