The series starts with a giant flaming bird hatching out of a planet. Just what exactly, in your opinion, has 'strained credulity' since then?I have always been willing to grant Peter David a lot of leeway because New Frontier books were so damned much fun to read... but they have begun to strain credulity.
But you can see rocks, arrows, and knives. There's a reason for the computer to simulate the actual objects in flight, even if safeties exist. There is no reason why it should be necessary for a holodeck to have guns that actually fire bullets, because nobody participating in the event (except Data or maybe Geordi) could see the bullets. They're not a necessary part of a convincing simulation. There's no reason for them to be there in the first place, so there's no reason why turning off the safeties would make them lethal. Even with the safeties off, there should be no bullets whose condition would be altered in any way by that deactivation.
But it needs the bullets for interaction with other objects and to create realistic impacts, doesn't it? It's basically a computer game where the game engine is composed of real matter and real physics? Or is it?
It could also be purely holographic with forcefields, where everything is purely simulated, calculated first and then holographically projected. But then, as said, safety protocols make not much sense, because there every risky thing would not be included to begin with. A ball bouncing would work with or without the force fields, since it's just a holographic pre-calculated animation. In the other possible version, a ball bouncing would be a replicated, real ball, bouncing because of real physics.
Maybe it's a mix of both, but then a programmer would need to decide beforehand what would be a real replicated object, and what would just be a holographic simulation. So a bullet that kills you might be a mistake of a programmer who took his holodeck game too seriously.
The series starts with a giant flaming bird hatching out of a planet. Just what exactly, in your opinion, has 'strained credulity' since then?I have always been willing to grant Peter David a lot of leeway because New Frontier books were so damned much fun to read... but they have begun to strain credulity.
I love New Frontier, and I think fans overthink it. It's hardly any more ridiculous than TOS was.
I love New Frontier, and I think fans overthink it. It's hardly any more ridiculous than TOS was.
^The difference is, any ridiculousness on TOS's part was unintentional. Roddenberry was trying to create a plausible SF universe grounded in character realism. It may often seem goofy by today's standards, but it was a considerable advance in realism over its predecessors and contemporaries in SFTV.
I love New Frontier, and I think fans overthink it. It's hardly any more ridiculous than TOS was.
^The difference is, any ridiculousness on TOS's part was unintentional. Roddenberry was trying to create a plausible SF universe grounded in character realism. It may often seem goofy by today's standards, but it was a considerable advance in realism over its predecessors and contemporaries in SFTV.
I'm with Christopher. Serious and sincere can look like camp or silliness decades later, but the intent still matters. In the context of its time, the original Star Trek was generally forward-looking and seriously intended. (Maybe not so much under Freiberger, but even then, not too many episodes are as silly as Lost in Space or Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea had become after a season or two.) It's up to the viewer to decide how to watch the show. I know some poeple only watch TOS for its camp value; I don't, any more than I watch TNG or any other Trek series that way. Hell, I can even watch Blake's 7 as a serious and sincere SF show. Well, most of the time.
PAD's being silly on purpose. His goal is significantly different from that of the original series writers, and it's being perceived accordingly by its intended audience. If you happen to like what he's doing, that's fine, but he's doing something very different from what the likes of Fontana and Coon had in mind.
^Yes, TOS had comedy episodes, but arising out of generally plausible circumstances and character reactions, and as an occasional variant within a universe that presented itself seriously and realistically. Funny things happen in real life, but telling a funny story in a believable setting is a very different thing from creating an entirely fanciful, exaggerated, or unrealistic setting.
True, "A Piece of the Action" wasn't entirely a realistic scenario, but it was no more implausible that strictly dramatic episodes like "Patterns of Force" or "The Paradise Syndrome," and it did offer a fairly coherent and rational explanation for its Earth parallels -- indeed, a considerably more credible one that the entirely serious "Miri" or the mostly serious "Bread and Circuses" had to offer. In fact, APotA presents a deadly serious scenario: a planet grossly contaminated by Earth influences, turned into a brutal, bloody, mob-ruled society as a result. The humor came from how Kirk chose to deal with the situation, how he and Spock made awkward efforts to fit in, etc.
So ST had humor, yes, but that doesn't mean it was a "camp" series like Lost in Space. It wasn't wisecracks and space gangsters and tribbles on a constant, unvarying basis. And when humor arose from the characters, it arose without compromising their believability as people.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.