So if Interstellar falls in the "speculative fiction" category, or contains minor elements that are extremely speculative, will that lower your opinion of the film?
That's a meaningless question because it misuses the term "speculative fiction." That label was coined to encompass all science fiction and fantasy, all fiction based on conjecture of any kind, whether a plausible extrapolation from real science or an idea derived from mythology and folklore, or anything in between.
You're also completely misunderstanding the point I'm making. My whole argument is that it's wrong to treat it as some kind of zero-sum choice between different approaches, that there's room for every flavor of fiction and it's silly to try to manufacture some kind of competition between them. I'm just such a strong advocate for hard science fiction because it's so vanishingly rare in non-prose SF, and because there's so little public understanding or appreciation for it. I want all flavors of SF to be well-represented, and that's the one that tends to be left out in the mass media, even though it's a major, influential part of SF literature. That's why I'm very glad we're getting more films like
Gravity and
Interstellar, that there seems to be an effort underway in Hollywood to bring more science into cinema. But of course there's always room for poetic license even in the hardest hard SF, as long as it serves the story. So please stop trying to manufacture some kind of arbitrary conflict between approaches. That's hardly a constructive or useful way to think about fiction.
I'm curious, did you find most of Star Trek boring as well? Because the magical engineering solution of the week to be all but fogotten as a solution to a problem only 3 episodes later - that star ships would often engage each other using the,"pew-pew," type of fiction and moreover would engage each other in the same XYZ configuration on screen - and added the immense amount of technobabble that was on the show has all of the elements that you seem to dislike - yet you're here on a Trek forum?
Same answer. I don't object to the existence of more fanciful science fiction -- I object to the assumption that it represents the
only kind of science fiction. That's simply ignorance on the part of the people making that assumption, because there are countless writers who specialize in hard SF. It's like assuming that the only flavors of ice cream are vanilla, chocolate, and chocolate chip and there's no such thing as strawberry ice cream. If I try to convince people that strawberry ice cream is a real thing and it's worth appreciating along with the other flavors, that
does not mean that I object to the existence of the other flavors. I just want people to know what they're missing.
In any case, the reason I like
Star Trek is because, when it originally came along, it was just about the most plausible SF show on television. Most of its competition was pure fantasy, but ST, though it did bend the rules a fair amount, was the only one that even bothered to try consulting with real scientists and engineers and incorporating some credible futurism into the mix. And the later productions that Roddenberry oversaw personally, including TMP and the early seasons of TNG, continued that push for credibility, even though Roddenberry's successors have generally let it slide. There's some genuinely good science here and there in early TNG. No, Trek has never been as solidly hard-SF as the kind of fiction I like to write and read, but it's better than most mass-media SF. Some credibility is better than none.
Indeed, it was
Star Trek that introduced me to space and science in the first place, that started my fascination with science. The best science fiction can inspire curiosity about real science, even inspire people to become scientists and devise new inventions or theories based on their favorite stories -- and
Star Trek has done that many times over the years. It's always had enough of a scientific core to stimulate the intellect and imagination, even if its more recent productions have fallen short in that regard.