me tooI saw "Serenity" prior to "Firefly"... in fact, having seen "Serenity" made me buy the "Firefly" DVD set.
me tooI saw "Serenity" prior to "Firefly"... in fact, having seen "Serenity" made me buy the "Firefly" DVD set.
me tooI saw "Serenity" prior to "Firefly"... in fact, having seen "Serenity" made me buy the "Firefly" DVD set.
Serenity was a GREAT movie - it's plot was tighter and it resolved a number of character arcs from the series brilliantly. I think it beat the new Trek movie in the most recent top 100 too.
Serenity was a GREAT movie - it's plot was tighter and it resolved a number of character arcs from the series brilliantly. I think it beat the new Trek movie in the most recent top 100 too.
Yep, Serenity clocks in at #88 and http://staging.usphs.cit.nih.gov/upcoming_events.aspx is at #93.
I have to approve of a list that ranks Forbidden Planet at #12, ahead of any Star Trek movie, and that leaves the vast majority of Trek movies off altogether.
List schmist. The rankings are pretty meaningless in the overall scheme of things.
It was a good list in that it respected great SF classics like Forbidden Planet, Metropolis and The Day The Earth Stood Still. Great also to note the inclusion of more demanding and/or off beat films like Solaris...
List schmist. The rankings are pretty meaningless in the overall scheme of things.
Everything is pretty meaningless in the overall scheme of things, as there is no overall scheme of things.
Serenity Budget: $40,000,000
Star Trek Budget: $150,000,000
Serenity has:
- A tough as nails but always morally in check Malcolm Reynolds as the main character. Even though he's going for the cash, he can still pull off being a character you can like and respect.
- Supporting characters actually have importance to the main character both in their abilities and in their companionship.
- Lots and lots of creative, non-practical sets, including Serenity's engineering area.
- A unique villain who is dedicated to not only his job, but also in what he believes in. He is a foe who understands that he himself is and will go to great lengths to achieve what he believe is true. He doesn't look at himself as a hero, but as a tool to make his dreams come true, which he even admits he wants nothing to do with due to his dark nature.
- An epic space battle involving hundreds of ships and great visual effects moments.
- Actual element of danger.
- No destiny, fate or foretold futures.
- Characters who respect those who they have lost.
- More than one important female character.
- The hero chooses to not kill the villain even without offering him a chance to surrender
Star Trek has:
- An arrogant, selfish James T. Kirk who just wants to be the best at everything even if it means cheating. He gives no respect towards others and has little to no redeeming qualities.
- Supporting characters' roles are limited to just ensuring that Kirk gets up in rank while they stay around just doing their usual thing.
- Sets are over lit, practical sets are used when they've never been used before, and engineering has concrete, steel beams and hanging light fixtures.
- A villain who is angry because he doesn't see situations from anyone else's point of view other than his own. His priorities are unrealistic, his backstory is heavily cliche and he never develops or goes through any change as a character.
- One space battle in the opening that involves only two ships.
- No element of danger since everyone who shoots at our characters can't aim, can't predict what they are about to do or guard anything important that is actually vital to their whole purpose.
- Destiny and fate have a major factor in that everyone comes together in the most unrealistically convenient manner, and the reasons these are great characters is not what they do, but because we are told they're great.
- Characters have next to no respect for one another. Kirk never apologizes for the rude, disloyal and incriminating actions throughout the story. McCoy makes racist remarks behind people's backs.
- Only one female character in the entire cast of characters and she doesn't do anything. Seriously. You can remove that klingon transmission element and nothing would be different.
- The hero decides to kill the villain after he refuses the surrender. The big point that goes against Kirk in this scene is that the villain was already doomed before being offered the chance to surrender.
What's the difference between Serenity and Star Trek? Serenity had talent behind the camera.
I loved both, however it's really no contest; however much fun it was to see Kirk, Spock & Bones get their Trek off, Serenity had a more organic & realistic feel to the characters & events. On the popcorn scale, Trek blows Serenity out of the water, but for meatyness, Joss just out-directs JJ I'm afraid.I loved both but thats a tough one.
Don't ever go to New Orleans or Texas, mah friend.I generally liked Firefly/Serenity. The folksy dialogue did get tiring at times though.
So...not a STXI Fan huh?
I loved both but thats a tough one.
Both had strengths and weaknesses... not a big fan of what happened to Wash and Book that killed a lot for me.
However unlike Serenity , Trek has a sequel.
I saw Serenity one time in the theatre, and watched it 30+ times more once I got the DVD.My litmus test - I didn't go see Serenity five times at the movies. I did for Star Trek.
I do own the DVD box set for Firefly but I've not been compelled to watch Serenity again.
Lindley, by my pretty floral bonnet, you are the genuine article![Mal]You sayin' that 'cause you think I don't know?[/Mal]
Serenity is about the underdogs who lost a war, and are now scraping by with the minimum success necessary to stay "in the black" (pun intentional).
I like Serenity and Firefly...
But I like Star Trek, way better...
Sharr
But let me rephrase my comment for accuracy: I don't personally find individual rankings on lists like this very meaningful...These kinds of lists best serve as starting points for discussion.
Okay I have moved it up the list to purchase if: "dvd set in bargain bin at Target".
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