Utopian fiction is not obsolete. I think Iain M Banks on his own can be taken as proof of that. Whatever problems Star Trek has had are about creative stagnation, not weaknesses in the overall concept.
Personally I think DS9 already ruined the Roddenberry format. They went to a dystopian serial.
Please. Read some real dystopian works like Nineteen Eighty-Four or Brave New World or Fahrenheit 451 or The Handmaiden's Tale and then tell me with a straight face that Star Trek: Deep Space Nine was a dystopia just because it didn't present an idealized future.
Was Roddenberry really utopian in all things? His ideas were turned into Andromeda and Earth Final Conflict, albeit after his death.
Sci-Fi is dead on tv along with many others genres that are chasing ever fewer number of availble production dollars.
Most TV watchers today are more interested in watching reality shows or the rare program. This can be seen in Syfy cutting SGU and other science fiction for WWE, which is at best a "reality" show.
Gene produced two pilots: Planet Earth and Genesis II set in a post-apocalyptic future (and were mined for elements used in Andromeda). Another pilot was Spectre which dealt with the supernatural and was set in present. Questor Tapes was another Roddenberry project set in the present. Questor Tapes has a slight utopian bent. ( I think that was Questor's goal for humanity)Was Roddenberry really utopian in all things? His ideas were turned into Andromeda and Earth Final Conflict, albeit after his death.
True but you need to remember that EFC and Andromeda were just crude outlines of series that were found in a desk in a basement ( if you believe the interviews given ) Gene never fully realized them or worked them to their conclusion, Rod was the driving force behind each of them, though the least season of each were just awful.
I don't want more human factor crap in Star Trek.
I don't want more human factor crap in Star Trek.
Well then, you're out of luck. Most good writers want to write about people, and most folks who really like stories want to hear and read and see stories about people.
City On The Edge Of Forever and Amok Time are nothing but "human factor crap."
Then what you want isn't Star Trek. Its always blended the "human factor crap" with SF escapism.I don't want more human factor crap in Star Trek.
Well then, you're out of luck. Most good writers want to write about people, and most folks who really like stories want to hear and read and see stories about people.
City On The Edge Of Forever and Amok Time are nothing but "human factor crap."
Human factor crap like "Fair Haven". What the hell was the point of that? I can see relationship garbage on every other show on tv. I need the whole episode dealing with plot like "The Royale".
I want the unique aspects of sci-fi ephasized, to do otherwise is to detract from the escapism. Are people complaining because the hero archetypes are too pure? Would Superman or Optimus Prime be more enjoyable if they were more thuggish?
"Interpersonal conflict" and sex have always been part of Trek from TOS on. A major part even. Spock and McCoy bickering, conflicts with the episode's guest star. Kirk sweet talking comely actresses in skimpy and or tight costuimes. Not sure what you mean by "domestic problems".No the detractors want more sex, more domestic problems and more interpersonal conflict ala Edward Jellico syndrome. Old Trek was fine.
If it can't be resurrected leave it be. New is not always better, Nu Who is pretty much garbage.
I just think if you take away Trek's optimism, It's not Star Trek anymore. That's what makes Trek unique.
It had always been about utopian approaches to very real problems.
I don't want more human factor crap in Star Trek. The main draw was always smart people brain storming to find a problem dictated by the plot. Solving mysteries, realizing paradoxes emphasizes the mind.
The two most popular characters were Spock and Data, what does that tell you?
Human factor crap like "Fair Haven".
True, but Law and Order (and most procedural shows) has never really been about the characters. They are just ciphers set up to tell a story. Sure we get the odd insight into there lives here and there, but you could plug anyone into any of those shows and still tell the same stories (which Law and Order has been doing for over 20 years).
James T. Kirk: "The more complex the mind, the greater the need for the simplicity of play."Human factor crap like "Fair Haven". What the hell was the point of that?
I disagree, the whole utopian thing only dates back to TNG, TOS was more realistic, less utopian, in it's depiction of the future.It had always been about utopian approaches to very real problems.
One of those examples wanted very much to be Human and to engage in "human factor crap." Watching Data's journey was one of the joys of TNG. Data's Day is one my fav episodes.The two most popular characters were Spock and Data, what does that tell you?
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