However, I have to point out that bringing Spock back to life in TSFS was at least as far-fetched as Kirk going from cadet to captain in STXI.
Yes, that was quite nonsensical (and in the dramatic sense, cowardly) and really should not have been done; sentimentality was the fatal disease of the old franchise, and the symptoms really started showing in TSFS. Which is why I specified in my commentary on the Genesis device that I was referring particularly to its first film appearance.
And yes, hi
Locutus, you're of course correct that elements of Genesis still require, as
YARN later put it, "some squinting to sustain suspension of disbelief." But Genesis and the nebula is very clearly an extrapolation of "life from lifelessness" and of how such a device might behave in random circumstances that it wasn't designed for. The through-line to what we
do know about it is clear and consistent -- albeit that yes, That Is Probably Not How Nebulas Work. So I'm afraid you're not really selling me on an equivalence between that and the randomness of Red Matter.
CommishSleer said:
But what about the Nexus? You could use it to go back/forward in time, live forever, get your greatest wish fulfilled, have all your physical needs met, move around the galaxy at will.
The Nexus as it was used was kind of dumb, but the idea was recognizably an application of ideas about space-time -- and the possibilities that would arise from being in a "place" or "state" that was genuinely time-less and space-less -- that
could have been interesting. The story it was part of just made unimaginative and ridiculous use of it (why with all of space and time to access does Picard insist on returning to an arbitrary point
just seconds before the bad guy carries out his evil plan?).
I think Red Matter is 100 times more realistic than the 'Nexus' and probably 100 other things shown in the Star Trek series.
The elements of Prime Trek that came closest to being similarly contrived were the appearances of the Omnipotent Space Jerks of whom Q became the ultimate type, and who were allowed to work any way the writers pleased Because Sufficiently-Advanced Technology Something-Something Magic. (And for this reason the Omnipotent Space Jerk trope also started to draw fire as lazy writing, and deservedly so, whatever the camp charms may be of watching Kirk in TOS face off with an actual no-foolin' Greek deity.)
Trek "science" otherwise contained plenty of fudging and handwaving, but to equate all or most of it with the randomness of Red Matter is to do it a very real disservice. Handwaving and random Deus Ex Machina is
not the same thing. And as I've pointed out more than once, this is often the unintentional side-effect of the kind of continuity tailgunning that's routinely employed to defend this or that NuTrek trope: in order to put NuTrek on an equal footing (and therefore legitimize it as Real Trek or something, is I gather supposed to be the idea) it frequently requires pretending the old shows and movies were
worse than they were, and running into problems trying to defend those stances because they so often depend on false analogies.
The galaxy needs less of this continuity tailgunning, is I guess where I come out. The exercise is largely pointless anyway, because convincing someone that such-and-such element of NuTrek is only bad in a way consistent with the old franchise at its worst is not likely going to convince them that it's
good if they don't already think so, or that it's "real Trek" if they don't already think it is. Better to let NuTrek stand and be discussed on its own merits, IMO.