igrokbok said:
If you change the elements of Trek that, when combined, created 1966 Star Trek, then it's not really Star Trek anymore. I mean,what's the point?
There's a version of "Hansel & Gretel" where the children find a gingerbread house, start eating its candy decorations, get captured by a witch and eventually escape.
There's a version of "Hansel & Gretel" where the children find a house made of cake, with a fence made of child-sized gingerbread men. They don't eat the house, but the siblings get captured by an old woman and eventually escape, only to find that their stepmother back home vanished at exactly the same time as Gretel killed the old woman. The gingerbread men fence turns back into all the children who'd been enchanted by the old woman over the years.
There's a version where the children find jewels after killing the witch and live happily ever after.
There's another version where a swan cheats them out of all the jewels in order to let them cross a river to get home.
All of these are enjoyable stories, and each of them are tailored to certain age groups and time periods.
The art of storytelling used to be an oral tradition, and changing details was both part of the art, and a problem associated with "Chinese whispers" syndrome.
Storytelling hasn't changed just because people learned to write, to read, and to make motion pictures. Just ask Superman, Batman, Wonderwoman, and any other character with multiple origin stories.
The point is: TOS is now of limited appeal to today's audiences. Why not remake it, let new audiences discover TOS, some of whom may then be attracted to its origins and all the myriad spin-offs?