"Remember when the people of the early 21st century were all carrying around physical smart phones in their hands?"
I think the only one that grates on me is "Relics". Though I think it has more to do with how it is acted than how it is written. I mean the whole repair estimate stuff originates with Star Trek III.
Wasn't being a quick thinker and coming up with solutions on the fly something expected of starship captains in Kirk's day, especially on a primarily exploratory assignment like the Enterprise's? Wouldn't Kirk, being so famous, be especially thought of in those terms by future generations who might exaggerate him into being a maverick?Kirk was a quick thinker with a gift for coming up with solutions on the fly, but it wasn't a defining character trait to the point of him being a maverick by any stretch.
One more example: Janeway, talking about Da Vinci, mentions that "Kirk claimed to have met him." The implication being that Janeway kinda regards this as a tall tale--or wildly exaggerated at least.
I actually liked that line, since it was a cute callback to "Requiem for Methuselah," and I'm amused by the idea that some of Kirk's more far-fetched adventures are now regarded with some skepticism.
Not to mention the fact that, by the 24th century, some of those "books" were written by Scotty. (If I remember "Relics" correctly.The way I always took both of the lines about Scotty inflating his estimates is that he quoted times by the book, but then cut every corner he could to get things done faster. It was a testament to his skill that he knew every such corner that could be cut.
Exactly. In fact, I now remember that's where I got the impression. Geordi quotes the manual about something and Scotty tells him that he knows that rule can be disregarded because he wrote it, and he was being conservative on paper.Not to mention the fact that, by the 24th century, some of those "books" were written by Scotty. (If I remember "Relics" correctly.)
Honestly, none of these really offended me. If anything, some of them are actually complimenting TOS by recalling what a colorful, freewheeling time it was. The only one that made me wince was the idea that Mirror Spock's revolution actually made things worse in the Mirror Universe, thus subverting the optimism of "Mirror, Mirror." But I can live with it.
One more example: Janeway, talking about Da Vinci, mentions that "Kirk claimed to have met him." The implication being that Janeway kinda regards this as a tall tale--or wildly exaggerated at least.
I actually liked that line, since it was a cute callback to "Requiem for Methuselah," and I'm amused by the idea that some of Kirk's more far-fetched adventures are now regarded with some skepticism.
It would've said even more if that sentence hadn't directly followed her saying they'd all be thrown out of Starfleet today.I think Janeway saying,Just once I would have loved to ride shotgun or something to that effect though ends up saying more.
Very interesting thoughts!TNG being a product of 1987 and TOS being a product of 1966, I wonder if the vibe they were going for was along the lines of "Those crazy hippies!" or "What were we thinking?" It would definitely serve as a metaphor for the Generation Gap.
Spock's the "radical" who wants to unify with the Romulans. Picard's the "left of center" New Democrat who says he'd love for the Neutral Zone to be abolished but there's a process to go through.
Then you have Janeway continuing the metaphor being like, "Ah, the '60s. Protests, demonstrations, make love not war, bra burning. Of course, they all would've been booted out today, but what a great time it must've been to be alive..."
I don't know why Scotty was so amazed. The Enterprise-D interiors looks just like the Enterprise-A interiors.
Yeah. I can understand why they did that, though. The MU pretty much had to still be a bad place, because otherwise there's no story. I just think that too many TOS sequels go to the "Kirk was wrong" well a little too easily.The only one that made me wince was the idea that Mirror Spock's revolution actually made things worse in the Mirror Universe, thus subverting the optimism of "Mirror, Mirror." But I can live with it.
Yeah, agreed. I wish Picard could've fought some telekinetic aliens in togas once in a while. Just for variety's sake.I think the Berman-era shows were always a little (or more than a little) self-conscious about their own inability to capture the adventure and fun spirit of the original. These awkward exchanges are simply the result of that insecurity.
Yeah, agreed. I wish Picard could've fought some telekinetic aliens in togas once in a while. Just for variety's sake.![]()
“The Apple”, “Spock’s Brain”; subverted in “Errand of Mercy”.We remade alien cultures in our image because we knew best.
”A Taste of Armageddon”It was, as Nicholas Meyer once said, about gunboat diplomacy.
I think David Gerrold wrote about TOS as a representation of Manifest Destiny on the galactic stage. The post-Vietnam landscape of that dark dream was a stark contrast, and the franchise reflected that.On TNG, they took the Prime Directive a lot more seriously and it seemed to be a much more rigid rule. Because who knows, we might be wrong again, the way we were wrong with Vietnam.
Exactly. Yes Kirk gains that reputation 'in universe' too, but in actuality it's not true. He doesn't *really* disobey orders in a massive way until he steals the Enterprise in The Search For Spock, and even then has co-conspirators.I don't really see any big problem with any of these. As has been said, people will sometimes look back on the past as being backwards and uncivilized, and sometimes long for the good old days. I personally love "Relics", and saw Scotty's annoying Geordi as a symptom of his love of engineering paired with his desire to show he's worth something in the present time. The "you didn't tell him how long it would really take" line doesn't imply the ridiculous tripling of estimates Scotty joked about with Kirk. It's actually good advice: If you think it will take two hours, say it will take two and a half. That way in the unlikely event something goes off kilter you have some wiggle room. It's a lot better than underestimating,
Wasn't being a quick thinker and coming up with solutions on the fly something expected of starship captains in Kirk's day, especially on a primarily exploratory assignment like the Enterprise's? Wouldn't Kirk, being so famous, be especially thought of in those terms by future generations who might exaggerate him into being a maverick?
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