The one thing I was the most freaked out about while walking out of the theater after watching the new Star Trek is that Vulcan has been freaking destroyed!! Wiped out by an artificial singularity that's sucked it into complete nothingness!!!
And that now we're all stuck with a new and alternate timeline/reality in which VULCAN IS NO MORE!!!

[*pauses and takes several...deep...breaths*]
[*pauses again and takes several...more...deep...breaths*]
[*pauses yet again...*]
Okay, I'm good...for now anyway. Sorry folks, just a little Stereotypical Disgruntled Fanboy Conniption Fit. It happens, y'know!
So where was I? Oh yeah! The destruction of Vulcan.
Listen, I understand perfectly well that J.J. Abrams, Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman want to shake up the status quo a little and not have to worry about fact-checking every single little detail regarding what actually happened or did not happen within already established canon, and that they'd want to have a clean slate. In principle, I'm actually down with that! It's actually quite audacious and clever how they use the time-honored Trek tradition of time travel as a means to achieve that. (Just so long as you can reconcile the idea of two discrete Star Trek universes.)
I just have a little bit of a problem with how they did it! If you will permit me to digress...
I remember way back in 1997 when I first saw the movie Independence Day during its theatrical run. I remember being vaguely disturbed by it for some reason that I couldn't at first pin down. Then I realized that it was because you had all these cities and buildings being destroyed...wiped out...freaking obliterated...by the aliens, and overall it didn't seem to carry all that much dramatic weight or gravity! I seemed to be upset over the fact that you had the onscreen destruction of hundreds...thousands...millions...of human lives, and that it seemed to all be in the service of a razzle-dazzle popcorn entertainment spectacular. I mean, yeah sure, it was only a stupid movie, but come on. When you're dealing in a fictional context with the life and death of people on such a grand scale, you need to show some sort of sensitivity to the fact that one's fellow living beings have perished! (I mean, yeah, there's the first Star Wars and the whole issue of the destruction of Alderaan, but I guess I felt it because Obi-Wan felt it!
)
When the planet of Vulcan was obliterated by Nero in the newStar Trek and millions upon billions of lives were lost, I felt disturbed by the fact that there didn't seem to be the appropriate dramatic weight or gravity that it truly deserved! I mean, what's going on here? Are Hollywood writers and filmmakers more comfortable dealing with filmmaking and storytelling more as a technical exercise, just the manufacture of razzle-dazzle popcorn entertainment, than as a vehicle for human (or otherwise) drama? I think that Star Trek ultimately deserves better than that.




[*pauses and takes several...deep...breaths*]
[*pauses again and takes several...more...deep...breaths*]
[*pauses yet again...*]
Okay, I'm good...for now anyway. Sorry folks, just a little Stereotypical Disgruntled Fanboy Conniption Fit. It happens, y'know!

Listen, I understand perfectly well that J.J. Abrams, Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman want to shake up the status quo a little and not have to worry about fact-checking every single little detail regarding what actually happened or did not happen within already established canon, and that they'd want to have a clean slate. In principle, I'm actually down with that! It's actually quite audacious and clever how they use the time-honored Trek tradition of time travel as a means to achieve that. (Just so long as you can reconcile the idea of two discrete Star Trek universes.)
I just have a little bit of a problem with how they did it! If you will permit me to digress...
I remember way back in 1997 when I first saw the movie Independence Day during its theatrical run. I remember being vaguely disturbed by it for some reason that I couldn't at first pin down. Then I realized that it was because you had all these cities and buildings being destroyed...wiped out...freaking obliterated...by the aliens, and overall it didn't seem to carry all that much dramatic weight or gravity! I seemed to be upset over the fact that you had the onscreen destruction of hundreds...thousands...millions...of human lives, and that it seemed to all be in the service of a razzle-dazzle popcorn entertainment spectacular. I mean, yeah sure, it was only a stupid movie, but come on. When you're dealing in a fictional context with the life and death of people on such a grand scale, you need to show some sort of sensitivity to the fact that one's fellow living beings have perished! (I mean, yeah, there's the first Star Wars and the whole issue of the destruction of Alderaan, but I guess I felt it because Obi-Wan felt it!

When the planet of Vulcan was obliterated by Nero in the newStar Trek and millions upon billions of lives were lost, I felt disturbed by the fact that there didn't seem to be the appropriate dramatic weight or gravity that it truly deserved! I mean, what's going on here? Are Hollywood writers and filmmakers more comfortable dealing with filmmaking and storytelling more as a technical exercise, just the manufacture of razzle-dazzle popcorn entertainment, than as a vehicle for human (or otherwise) drama? I think that Star Trek ultimately deserves better than that.
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