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Abrams: ST is silly and ridiculous

And again someone who tries to marginalize, and ridicule what people have been saying by saying something NONE of them have been saying. But do continue to be dishonest, maybe you'll start to believe it yourself one day.

I am saying it, dude. And if you don't want what I want, then you're not a True Fan.

And another dishonest, lying, attempt.
For Pete's sake, 3D, either get your sarcasm meter checked or go take a walk and get some fresh perspective, but stop digging through old posts looking for fights to pick and stop calling people liars before it gets you a warning.
 
3D Master, you do realize that just because someone says something is silly and campy doesn't mean that they're saying it's bad, right?

That, to some people, silly and campy are good?
 
Abrams is absolutely right. Much of Trek was ridiculous, campy, and silly. The goofy suits, silly bowl-haircut, and the horrible, horrible writing. At least 2/3 of all the stories from all the series were absolutely awful, especially when weighed against science fiction literature. (Everybody likes to make fun of "Spock's Brain", but for me the most cringe-inducing moment was "I AM KIROK!!!")

There was a lot about Star Trek that was cool, though. In a very general sense, the premise was awesome. Giant space-ship on an exploration mission. It doesn't get any cooler than that! The characters were cool too, even though Kirk, Spock, McCoy (and Scotty to a lesser degree) were the only ones with any kind of identifiable personalities. They also clearly worked as hard as they were able to make the ship and accessory technology as believable as possible. (a doctrine totally abandoned by the later series, in my opinion)

It's good that he recognizes the lameness of Star Trek, better so as to isolate the lameness from the coolness, leaving us with pure, concentrated cool.
 
Abrams is absolutely right. Much of Trek was ridiculous, campy, and silly. The goofy suits, silly bowl-haircut, and the horrible, horrible writing. At least 2/3 of all the stories from all the series were absolutely awful, especially when weighed against science fiction literature. (Everybody likes to make fun of "Spock's Brain", but for me the most cringe-inducing moment was "I AM KIROK!!!")

There was a lot about Star Trek that was cool, though. In a very general sense, the premise was awesome. Giant space-ship on an exploration mission. It doesn't get any cooler than that! The characters were cool too, even though Kirk, Spock, McCoy (and Scotty to a lesser degree) were the only ones with any kind of identifiable personalities. They also clearly worked as hard as they were able to make the ship and accessory technology as believable as possible. (a doctrine totally abandoned by the later series, in my opinion)

It's good that he recognizes the lameness of Star Trek, better so as to isolate the lameness from the coolness, leaving us with pure, concentrated cool.
What we're gonna get is gonna be freezing.
 
You don't seem to understand what campy is. Campy is deliberately making something silly, often taking something that is a little iffy and pushing it way over the top, to get a laugh out of people.

I don't think that's necessarily the definition of camp. Retrospection and a post-modern hindsight tend to affect perception; after all, shows like Dallas, Jonny Quest, and Starsky & Hutch were made with the most serious of intentions but come across as campy today (as opposed to, say, CHIPs and Dynasty, which were indeed made with camp in mind).
Actually, by definition, it is. Camp is a knowing and deliberate exaggeration, not simply the derision by a later generation for the art of a previous generation.
 
Camp is a knowing and deliberate exaggeration, not simply the derision by a later generation for the art of a previous generation.

My favourite 60s "Batman" anecdote: early silver screen idol, Tallulah Bankhead, was cast as the Black Widow and the director was advising her on her performance. She said "Don't tell me about camp, darling. I invented it."
 
Wow, I didn't realize there was a mathematical formula for figuring out if you're a fan of something! Here I thought it had to do with consistently following and enjoying that entertainment for 35 years of my life!

Seriously, folks, with the "you don't agree with my opinion of this aspect of Star Trek so you're not a real fan" crap - get over yourself.

You can't be a fan of something if you consider it bad. If you consider 80% of it bad, you consider IT bad. In fact, I can't even grasp why anyone would be watching something that is 80% bad, having only a few good things.

Of course you can. It's extremely easy. You watch the fantastic episodes like The Corbomite Manuever, Balance of Terror and CotEoF and you don't watch the episodes like A Piece of the Action (which I admit I loooovvveeddd when I was a kid) and Return of the Archons (which I hated even when I was a kid.)

The good of TOS is so good, it's simple to ignore the really terrible *coughSpock's Braincough*. When VOY and ENT came along, there simply was no good anymore, not even sorta, kinda, middlin' good. It was all That Which Survives. (which may the single most mind-numbingly boring hour of television ever produced.)


You want to be a fan of something, you have to consider a majority of it good, and that means 51%, and I'm thinking if you consider only 51% of something good, you're at best a casual fan, and thus not a fan(atic) at all.

Nonsense. Being a fanatic means knowing a great deal about, and havnig a continuing interest in something. I know political fanatics who hate politicians, Congress and the Supreme Court, but are entirely obsessed with them all.

PS - TOS is silly and campy. In fact Star Trek in general is silly and campy. That's one of the many reasons that I love it. I am not only a fan, I'm a second generation fan, and I could probably kick your behind in a Trek trivia contest.
I doubt you'd win, I've won Trek trivia contests, but that's besides the point. Trek is not silly and certainly not campy. You don't seem to understand what campy is. Campy is deliberately making something silly, often taking something that is a little iffy and pushing it way over the top, to get a laugh out of people.

No, you don't undertand what campy is.

From Dictionary.com

camp (noun)

-something that provides sophisticated, knowing amusement, as by virtue of its being mannered and stylized, self-consciously artifical or extravagant...

Shatner's and Nimoy's performances were both highly stylized, and Shatner's was quite extravagant. The entire aesthetic of TOS was mannered and self-consciously artificial (Janice Rand's hairdo, Mea Three's dress). Also notice that the definition says nothing about provoking a laugh, only "knowing amusement". Granted Trek did not set out to be camp, but that was because camp was a relatively new phenomenon of the ultra-hip at the time, and Gene Roddenberry was basically a Herbert - and speaking of stylized, mannered and artificial, let us not forget:

http://img.trekmovie.com/tosrem/waytoeden/new_tosr075_extra_04.jpg

Hippiiiiieees iiiiiiiinnnnn spaaaaaacccccccee!


Star Trek never did that; humorous episodes aside, they were humorous, not campy. The two not being the same. Star Trek thus was never campy, never ever in its entire run in ANY incarnation.

It may have a few episodes that are silly (I'm looking at you "The Alternative Factor", "Threshold", "Innocence") but having a few silly and ridiculous episodes, does not make the entire thing silly. That's like saying because Star Trek, The X-Files, Stargate, Highlander, etc had a few comedic episodes all of those series were comedies.

It's not necessarily whole episodes, but many moments from many episodes. Buff Apollo in a mindress. Kirk choking from invisible gas. The battle music in Amok Time. The above mentioned space hippies. Green-haired, silver-bikinied warrior women that Kirk gives an "empowering" speech to. If you can say with a straight face that these things are not silliness incarnate, then I say you have no sense of humor.

Being a fan of something does not mean approaching it with an uncritical (or untruthful) eye. I can acknowledge every single thing wrong wtih Star Trek, I can even sum it up into numbers and come up with that more of it was bad than was good (certainly that's true of the entire Star Trek ouevre). At the same time I can still be enchanted by it, still be amazed at how it created a universe that sparked my imagination far beyond guys in stiff green lizard suits, and that continues to capture my imagination today.

I am a huge fan of Star Trek, always have been and always will be. No matter how many times some self-appointed authority of Trek says differently.

Besides, Infinite Diversity in Infinite Combinations. If you're a real fan - you'd live the creed.

Reach, brother. You can do it!

;)
 
Of course you can. It's extremely easy. You watch the fantastic episodes like The Corbomite Manuever, Balance of Terror and CotEoF and you don't watch the episodes like A Piece of the Action (which I admit I loooovvveeddd when I was a kid) and Return of the Archons (which I hated even when I was a kid.)

The good of TOS is so good, it's simple to ignore the really terrible *coughSpock's Braincough*. When VOY and ENT came along, there simply was no good anymore, not even sorta, kinda, middlin' good. It was all That Which Survives. (which may the single most mind-numbingly boring hour of television ever produced.)

And if you ignore more than half of it, you're not a fan. I don't watch Enterprise at all, anymore, and the few episodes I did watch, doesn't make me claim I'm a fan of the show. That's because I consider it BAD.

Nonsense. Being a fanatic means knowing a great deal about, and havnig a continuing interest in something. I know political fanatics who hate politicians, Congress and the Supreme Court, but are entirely obsessed with them all.
Which is nothing like being a fan of a show, or a band, or a singer, or whatnot.

I doubt you'd win, I've won Trek trivia contests, but that's besides the point. Trek is not silly and certainly not campy. You don't seem to understand what campy is. Campy is deliberately making something silly, often taking something that is a little iffy and pushing it way over the top, to get a laugh out of people.
No, you don't undertand what campy is.

From Dictionary.com

camp (noun)

-something that provides sophisticated, knowing amusement, as by virtue of its being mannered and stylized, self-consciously artifical or extravagant...

Yeah, that's what I said, and Star Trek never did it.

Shatner's and Nimoy's performances were both highly stylized, and Shatner's was quite extravagant.
Shatner's performance is always stylized. Nimoy had to play an emotionless character. Nothing about it, is camp.

The entire aesthetic of TOS was mannered and self-consciously artificial (Janice Rand's hairdo, Mea Three's dress).
No, it wasn't. There was nothing artificial and self-conscious about it. Well, apart from it being a show in the future and thus they didn't want to make carbon copies of hair styles of the day; and even then, most of those hair styles weren't that much off from the real ones in the day.

If that is artificial and self-conscious, then The Dark Knight is artificial and self-conscious.

Also notice that the definition says nothing about provoking a laugh, only "knowing amusement".
That would be the same thing.

Granted Trek did not set out to be camp, but that was because camp was a relatively new phenomenon of the ultra-hip at the time, and Gene Roddenberry was basically a Herbert - and speaking of stylized, mannered and artificial, let us not forget:

http://img.trekmovie.com/tosrem/waytoeden/new_tosr075_extra_04.jpg

Hippiiiiieees iiiiiiiinnnnn spaaaaaacccccccee!
And yet, not camp.

It's not necessarily whole episodes, but many moments from many episodes. Buff Apollo in a mindress.
That would make every single depiction of a Greek god, and every period piece about the Greeks silly. I'm sure the Greeks and people who made movies about them find it good to know that everything they did is silly.

Kirk choking from invisible gas.
That would actually be dramatic. And seeing as most gasses, especially those that are used for poison, are invisible, there's again nothing silly about it.

The battle music in Amok Time.
Ah, so dramatic music is silly. I'm sure the producers of major block busters that used dramatic music are happy to know their music was silly.

Also, you must have really liked Berman's Star Trek.

The above mentioned space hippies.
Wow, one little silly thing; yeah, the show was soooo silly.

Green-haired, silver-bikinied warrior women that Kirk gives an "empowering" speech to.
Exactly how is that silly?

If you can say with a straight face that these things are not silliness incarnate, then I say you have no sense of humor.
I have plenty sense of humor. You seem to be incapable of turning off your humor and find everything silly you look at.

Being a fan of something does not mean approaching it with an uncritical (or untruthful) eye. I can acknowledge every single thing wrong wtih Star Trek, I can even sum it up into numbers and come up with that more of it was bad than was good (certainly that's true of the entire Star Trek ouevre). At the same time I can still be enchanted by it, still be amazed at how it created a universe that sparked my imagination far beyond guys in stiff green lizard suits, and that continues to capture my imagination today.

I am a huge fan of Star Trek, always have been and always will be. No matter how many times some self-appointed authority of Trek says differently.
Oh, but I never said being a fan means you have to be uncritical. Quite the opposite. Merely that the majority of it, you have to find good.

And I can also acknowledge every single thing wrong with Star Trek; but they are in the minority, while the vast majority of it is good.

Besides, Infinite Diversity in Infinite Combinations. If you're a real fan - you'd live the creed.

Reach, brother. You can do it!
Except that Infinite Diversity in Infinite Combinations does not mean one isn't allowed to be critical of those combinations, and can't point out the blatantly negative ones. Hitler was evil bastard and a murderer, so were most of his henchman. According to you, I have to just go, "Hitler Halleluja! Infinite Diversity in Infinite Combinations!"
 
Hi All.

New here :)

------

What Abrams said has been read, and understood.

He feels that TOS looks silly. The uniforms look silly, Spock (and Vulcans?) look silly, and the whole thing is ridiculous.

No.

It doesn't and isn't.

I read what he said.

I don't like what he said.

I disagree with what he said.

He's wrong.

What I don't understand is how someone who agrees with him can at the same time be a fan of the original. I mean, isn't it "silly" and "ridiculous"? Isn't it lacking in quality and somewhere along the lines of a "B" scifi movie from the 50s?

No.

It isn't.

If someone feels that way about TOS, then maybe it's not the thing for them to be working with.

If someone feels that way about TOS, then them being a fan is...umm...very much in doubt.

You can't be a sincere fan with an affection for a piece, and at the same time feel it's stupid. That's a bit contradictory.

I'm a bit sad about how this has turned out, the deceptive "politics" used to try and keep fans on their side, and the fact that more of us don't feel this is "wrong".

Does this make me a bad guy? No.

It means I like what we had, and it's being overwritten.

As I said in another post, I just hope that even the different look of the bridge will be (in the movie) attributed to the earlier attempts by the Romulans to alter the timeline, meaning that this really IS being acknowledged as "changed". In some small way, it'll mean this is still "our" TOS, and 'the Romulans are to blame'.

Read below my friend.

Re-read that quote. It is only about how TOS looks are dated and would look "silly" to modern audiences and the new viewers they're trying to lure. He doesn't say the stories were silly. Or the characters were silly. Just the looks. The '60s esthetics. Even Roddenberry realized he couldn't just put the sets and models from the show and put them on the big screen.

And "Galaxy Quest" mocked the whole Star Trek paradigm... So his challenge is to make a Trek movie that doesn't come off like, say, the awful Starsky & Hutch movie. He wants to make a "serious" Trek movie, not a parody of the original that makes people feel like they're watching Saturday Night Live.

Get over your indignation and actually read what Abrams said.

I agree with this. Well said.

You try and replicate the 60's look the way they did on DS9 and ENT, and it really does look sill and out of place. Watching those episodes of DS9 and ENT with those 60's sets... no, it looked so out of place on those shows. Be happy that JJ actually makes them look good in what we've seen. Classic look, tweaked for good reason.
 
please dont think me trying to attack anyone, but this thread worries me. Anything that may harm peoples confidence in the new trek film is bad for star trek as a whole.

I would be willing to be abrahams was purposly being controversial to stir up hype and interest in the new film. and by the looks of it, it worked. people are talking about trek again after 5 years in the Abyss.... Hallelujah!!!
 
:brickwall:It's like watching a dog chase its tail.

Is that what you're doing?

Funny how someone expressing sincere feelings strikes you that way, but you expressing yours...

Should others view you the same way?

Are you being respectful, or trying to silence someone when you just don't care for their point of view?

I'm a little unclear on what your post means.

Excuse me? YOU'RE the one telling everyone who doesn't agree with you that they should "give up" on Star Trek and go watch something else. YOU are the one claiming you know what Star Trek is "really" about and people who disagree with you don't "really love" TOS and aren't real fans.

That's respectful?

And I can't believe there is an honest-to-God Godwin in this thread as well.... :rolleyes:
 
Shatner's and Nimoy's performances were both highly stylized, and Shatner's was quite extravagant.

I don't know where you get that; I find his Kirk to be far more naturalistic than the robotic acting style one sees from many of the later Trek actors.

As to the look of the show itself, it was a theatrical production. It had a certain aesthetic -- an artistic expression. Modern producers eschew that in favor of what they think is realism. They throw away the artistry in the process.
 
I have to disagree with Lapis re Return of the Archons. The lack of self-control evident in The Body, once Landru's suppressive influence is removed, chills me.
 
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