In the words of Shatner, I should "get a life," but I often feel that the attraction younger fans feel towards "Star Trek" in general is completely foreign to me.
I get most upset reading the threads on the new movie's board, but it happens elsewhere, too. There are fans who want cool space battles. Fans who want to see major interstellar wars. Fans who want to know why the Federation does not launch warships, battleships, have space marines, fighter wings and so on.
That's all fine, and I'm glad that the various elements put in place by TOS are celebrated, if in exaggerated fashion. And I don't even really mind when fans of the latest cast mock the actors who originated the roles. It's all just part of breathing new life into the franchise; teens always rebel against their parents.
But I take away something very different from "Star Trek," and above all the sci-fi fun it is this: that diversity is not only acceptable, it is positive; that exploration is an end unto itself; that warfare is the last and least acceptable alternative.
Yes, this is all "don't rape my childhood," but damn it, those messages were important to me growing up during Watergate and the Munich terrorist massacre and Nixon's resignation. I wanted, and still want -- 35 years later -- to believe that NASA's Apollo missions and the fictitious philosophy of IDIC meant something.
In 2008 we seem to be back to the 1930s-50s kewl space battles of Ming the Merciless vs. Flash Gordon, of "Crash" Corrigan and "Space Patrol."
For all their faults, I wonder if Berman and Braga fought the good fight after all, and more than anything else fell to the changing and more superficial values of the first decade of the 21st century.
I've been watching all the "Trek" TV programs on DVD recently, even DS9, which I lost interest in early on.
I'm left with the firm belief that, after everything, TOS was the most hopeful and therefore most truly futuristic of all the "Trek" incarnations.
What do you think?
I get most upset reading the threads on the new movie's board, but it happens elsewhere, too. There are fans who want cool space battles. Fans who want to see major interstellar wars. Fans who want to know why the Federation does not launch warships, battleships, have space marines, fighter wings and so on.
That's all fine, and I'm glad that the various elements put in place by TOS are celebrated, if in exaggerated fashion. And I don't even really mind when fans of the latest cast mock the actors who originated the roles. It's all just part of breathing new life into the franchise; teens always rebel against their parents.
But I take away something very different from "Star Trek," and above all the sci-fi fun it is this: that diversity is not only acceptable, it is positive; that exploration is an end unto itself; that warfare is the last and least acceptable alternative.
Yes, this is all "don't rape my childhood," but damn it, those messages were important to me growing up during Watergate and the Munich terrorist massacre and Nixon's resignation. I wanted, and still want -- 35 years later -- to believe that NASA's Apollo missions and the fictitious philosophy of IDIC meant something.
In 2008 we seem to be back to the 1930s-50s kewl space battles of Ming the Merciless vs. Flash Gordon, of "Crash" Corrigan and "Space Patrol."
For all their faults, I wonder if Berman and Braga fought the good fight after all, and more than anything else fell to the changing and more superficial values of the first decade of the 21st century.
I've been watching all the "Trek" TV programs on DVD recently, even DS9, which I lost interest in early on.
I'm left with the firm belief that, after everything, TOS was the most hopeful and therefore most truly futuristic of all the "Trek" incarnations.
What do you think?