I was hoping for something a little more advanced to occur in the 21st Century, not a revamp of something old... (3D)
(Star Trek)

I was hoping for something a little more advanced to occur in the 21st Century, not a revamp of something old... (3D)
Come on Paramount, get a grip. Don't ruin something again with this 3D non-sense.
Funny, I thought it was exactly the other way round. TNG films got less and less amazing VFX, and Star Trek 2009 was all about big budget action and VFX.Looks like Paramount wants to ruin Star Trek againStar Trek isn't about special effects. It's about a good story and a good plot. That's why Trek XI was successful, look at what happened to the TNG films. They were good in there own way, but just because they had more special effects didn't make them top-notch films. (First Contact was considered to be the best TNG film, and like it or not, I think it had the least special effects of all TNG Films)
^^ Why that would ruin our little clique!![]()
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* Magic: The art that purports to control or forecast natural events, effects, or forces by invoking the supernatural
* Magic: The art that purports to control or forecast natural events, effects, or forces by invoking the supernatural
And you invoke the supernatural by using an inversed polaron beam, err, I mean, a magic wand.
That's a distinction that's not a distinction at all. Didn't the locals in "Omega Glory" call ray guns "fire boxes?"
Look, I can teleport. Abracadabra!
Just because something is "supposed to have scientific underpinnings" doesn't mean that it credibly does.
"Inversed polaron beam" means nothing more than "Abracadbra."
I actually make no particular distinction between sf and other kinds of fantasy. Science fiction is just a genre of fantasy, same as supernatural horror or swords-and-sorcery stories.
Red matter/polaron beam/dilithium crystal/abracadabra.
Do you see any distinction between general fiction and fantasy because I would say SF and Fantasy are sub genres of general fiction, but not of each other?
Compare that with Star Wars, where the Force is introduced from the start as something quasi-scientific, emanating from life forms as though it were something like gravity or electromagnetism.
That's the true dividing line - what does the author or director intend? Star Wars is intended to be sci fi, LOTR is intended to be fantasy. Both employ "magic" as a story element, but the intention is very different. There's no point in ignoring the obvious and quibbling over phantoms.
Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.It means its supposed to be SF, whereas "Abracadbra." means it isn't, in my view."Inversed polaron beam" means nothing more than "Abracadbra."
And of course science fiction is a subgenre of fantasy - FTL spaceships and telepathic aliens no more exist, nor is there any more evidence to support the likelihood of their existence, than trolls or goblins or unicorns.
There are many centuries of fantastic storytelling and mythology preceding the first popular works of science fiction (yeah, go ahead and claim Lucien, everybody else does) and all of it forms the greatest part of sf's DNA.
Nor, in fact, is the value of science fiction literature particularly based on either the relevance or accuracy of its scientific or speculative content.
As long as people enjoy the story, not one reader in ten thousand really gives a damn whether anything in it is possible or even plausible in any but narrative terms.
Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.It means its supposed to be SF, whereas "Abracadbra." means it isn't, in my view."Inversed polaron beam" means nothing more than "Abracadbra."
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