In that case I have this holodeck program you might be interested in..
Again, people, CONTEXT.
Context works both ways though. This Kirk is younger and led a very different life than his prime universe counterpart.
He was trying to compare Kirk saying Spock looked like Satan in good humor as something that is no different to calling Spock "Pointy". That's the difference I was trying to point out.
However, the point you bring up about this Kirk being different in this alternate reality IS valid. I'll take that. However, it's not a trait that I want to see with Kirk, alternate universe or otherwise, because it only makes him more unlikable to me. Same thing like when he tries to open up with Spock, but when he doesn't respond, Kirk just rolls his eyes like "why do I bother?".
But Star Trek is full of such "Comic book" ideas. If it was an occasional anomaly, there could be a case, but its not. Science that works like magic is the norm, not the exception.
TOS was pulp science fiction. Seriously. Kirk was fighting lizard men, Greek gods, multi-color brains and Nazis.
I'd say they're Star Trek done as comic book movies (with a fair amount of Star Wars under the chassis -- themes of destiny, culminating medal scenes, STID even gives us a Millennium Falcon-style shuttle chase on the surface of Kronos). Trek always had its share of pulp, but the gestalt of nuTrek is more purely pulp than it's ever been.
Pure pulp can of course be plenty entertaining... which is why even the worst Star Wars has always made money. It only irritates me to the extent it does in the context of Trek because whatever heights Trek climbed or depths it sank to in days of yore, it was a vessel for a more diverse kind of storytelling than that. I think that's the core difference some people feel between nuTrek and its predecessors. Certainly it's the core difference for me.
Thing is... Roddenberry admittedly lifted plenty from pulp science fiction magazines of the 50' and early-60's.
I wonder if some of the divide over the Abrams films could simply come down to folks who like serious drama played straight vs. folks who like to have a fun time with bigger than life heroes?
Good point. TOS is pretty much an anthology series that uses that same cast and characters from episode to episode. It has a very pulp-magazine feel to it. Versus latter day, TNG and beyond, series where Trek began to take itself much more seriously as a dramatic series.
But Star Trek is full of such "Comic book" ideas. If it was an occasional anomaly, there could be a case, but its not. Science that works like magic is the norm, not the exception.
TOS was pulp science fiction. Seriously. Kirk was fighting lizard men, Greek gods, multi-color brains and Nazis.
Kirk as Buck Rogers and Flash Gordon. The White Hat cowboy riding in to save the town.
THIS.
Most "serious" sci-fi writers and fans consider all televised SF to be drivel by comparison, and they were largely right. Even Babylon 5 is baby steps toward where literary SF is at.And most serious sci-fi writers and fans considered Star Trek to be drivel
THIS.
Is exactly what I'm talking about. Star Trek contained plenty of sci-fi pulp, obviously... but if it was purely that it would never have distinguished itself from Lost in Space or Buck Rogers.
That it did so requires accounting for, and the accounting is relatively easy: alongside the SF pulp, it also had scope for other things. That's how episodes like "Balance of Terror" or "City at the Edge of Forever" became possible.
Most "serious" sci-fi writers and fans consider all televised SF to be drivel by comparison, and they were largely right. Even Babylon 5 is baby steps toward where literary SF is at.And most serious sci-fi writers and fans considered Star Trek to be drivel
But that has nothing to do with the fact that Star Trek successfully elevated itself above its televised peers by broadening its horizons. An achievement you feel the need to shit on because nuTrek just commits to the pulp.
CorporalCaptain, if you're seeing this? This is what I'm talking about, right here. I'm not talking about having one's own perspective or admitting TOS had flaws. I'm talking about actively falsifying the record in perceived and supposed (and unnecessary) defense of NuTrek. Do you see why some might find it annoying?
Comparing Star Trek to Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers is a step too far, IMO. That's like saying Gunsmoke is Roy Rogers or Hopalong Cassidy. Star Trek was trying to lift SF on TV up from the "kiddie fare" of Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers by telling adult stories. Shows like Gunsmoke and Have Gun Will Travel did the same thing for Westerns years earlier. Like wise, equating the new Trek films with Gordon and Rogers isn't fair either. The characters and stories are much more complex than that. Nero and Khan are not the one dimensional, mustache twirling, Mwahahaha villains in the mold of Ming the Merciless.
I think Kirk was more conflicted and complex than Flash or Buck. Especially early Season One Kirk, he was more prone to brooding and suffering. I can't see Buck or Flash in a story like COTEOF or Balance of Terror.
I think Kirk was more conflicted and complex than Flash or Buck. Especially early Season One Kirk, he was more prone to brooding and suffering. I can't see Buck or Flash in a story like COTEOF or Balance of Terror.
Simply cause we expect a certain style from those franchises; they wrote what their audiences bought.
TOS approached it a bit more seriously, but it's pulp-roots are there. They just polished it and took the risk by going outside of the expectations of the time by going for the serious stuff along with the silly and over the top.
Comparing Star Trek to Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers is a step too far, IMO. That's like saying Gunsmoke is Roy Rogers or Hopalong Cassidy. Star Trek was trying to lift SF on TV up from the "kiddie fare" of Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers by telling adult stories. Shows like Gunsmoke and Have Gun Will Travel did the same thing for Westerns years earlier. Like wise, equating the new Trek films with Gordon and Rogers isn't fair either. The characters and stories are much more complex than that. Nero and Khan are not the one dimensional, mustache twirling, Mwahahaha villains in the mold of Ming the Merciless.
An offhand statement about what "most serious sci-fi writers and fans" thought about anything cannot be taken seriously. Certainly there were those who went on record about what they thought of TOS, but how can we know what most thought?!?
Yep. Khan and nuKhan are identical in every way. How could I possibly have missed that they're twins? Obviously I failed to notice that they're of the same ethnic background! Of course a caucasian guy with an accent that reminds me of Alan Rickman is really somebody who was born in India!
Racist remarks are always meant to be funny, and those who do not just skim over it are at fault.
Just replace anything Kirk and McCoy direct at Spock with real world phrases and you realize what a bunch of intolerant racists these characters are. It's the basic problem when you bring characters and their interactions from the 60s into these times. Green-blooded hobgoblin? Pointy ears? Are you out of your Vulcan mind?
[Made-up quotes containing racial/ethnic slurs redacted. Any point which needed making could have been made just as effectively without these. - M']
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