...at some point in the film, our patience will be rewarded with the old girl as she is.
As she was.

...at some point in the film, our patience will be rewarded with the old girl as she is.
I stated this before in another thread, but it is on topic here as well...I agree, surely hope this movie captures the spirit of a "wagon train to the stars" and frontierism.
Sharr
By Picard's time, he was a cog in the bureaucratic machine... like someone said, when Picard left there was the Federation machine to clean up any loose ends.
In Kirk's time, he WAS the machine! He was the Federation to many races and his actions had lasting effects.
While Picard was the diplomat, Kirk and Spock were the Lewis & Clark/old West marshalls. Their seat-of-the-pants diplomacy/adventure is the stuff from which good TV & movies are made.![]()
Whenever someone starts working on a Star Trek movie, we always hear they went back and watched all (or a lot of) the episodes. Maybe what they should do instead is read Hornblower. That will give them the feeling of being the representative of something bigger, out on the frontier, far from the control of, and power of, home, needing to make decisions and take actions on their own.
Newer Star Trek has been more like our current military, where decisions can be made at the Pentagon in real time.
I'm all for that, and I absolutely agree with Moore.
And I love nuBSG.
When Moore describes modern Trek not being out there all alone, he's clearly suffering amnesia or has just repressed seven long years we had to endure with Voyager.
I agree with Ron Moore 100%.
But then, I usually do
When Moore describes modern Trek not being out there all alone, he's clearly suffering amnesia or has just repressed seven long years we had to endure with Voyager.
If you find out whatever pill Moore took to forget "Voyager," can you let me know?
The original series was much more science fiction oriented than any of the rest. Not technodrabble but stories written by real science fiction writers with imaginations geared toward science. Later incarnations became more fantasy world oriented, and the writers were more from the realm of fantasy novel writers.
For example?Later incarnations became more fantasy world oriented, and the writers were more from the realm of fantasy novel writers.
I completely disagree. I think you are confusing less technobabble and more focus on character as the solutions to conflict with being more scientifically valid. With a few exceptions, the original series was a hodge-podge of scientific gibberish for the most part, no better or worse than newer series. When you think about it, besides "the power isn't flowing, the crystals are going to crack, and the shields are at 60%", they didn't say a whole hell of a lot about their technology at all, just how they used it. If anything, people like Okuda and Sternbach tried to incorporate more "real" science into Trek with their designs and technical touches, but in the 90s the writers ran away with it and by the time of Voyager, entire plots and scenes revolved around using fake words to attempt to explain complex ship-board systems and the problems they were causing. It's no wonder the average person didn't want anything to do with Trek any more, it had nothing to do with real life by that point.
People think all modern Trek is riddled with technobabble, but most of TNG's was well-tempered and quite often grounded in some real principal. In a way, it was probably necessary for an audience that was becoming increasingly familiar with technology and communications to be convinced by their universe. It's just a shame they started to focus in on it so much.
That is because TOS inspired many in the scientific fields to make the present look like the Trek future.What Trek now suffers from is trying to relate to technology that we have today. Besides the obvious trekisms, most technology seems being capable of today's standards and the designs are pretty much what we design now. There is no more the 'wow' factor of Trek technology, which has made Trek bland at best. The stories being stupid didn't help modern Trek either.
That is because TOS inspired many in the scientific fields to make the present look like the Trek future.What Trek now suffers from is trying to relate to technology that we have today. Besides the obvious trekisms, most technology seems being capable of today's standards and the designs are pretty much what we design now. There is no more the 'wow' factor of Trek technology, which has made Trek bland at best. The stories being stupid didn't help modern Trek either.
The palm sized flip phones from Motorola were called Star-Tac, as close as they could come to Star-Trek... real life science inspired by science fiction. This is just one of many inventions based on sci-fi.
When Moore describes modern Trek not being out there all alone, he's clearly suffering amnesia or has just repressed seven long years we had to endure with Voyager.
Later series didn't inspire like this. I am open to being wrong, but I've never seen it.
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