I got news for ya - most of that "science" stuff in old Star Trek is just as much of a fantasy as the Force is.
Absolutely Right(TM).
There hasn't been anything "intellectual" about Star Trek in a long, long time.
I got news for ya - most of that "science" stuff in old Star Trek is just as much of a fantasy as the Force is.
I got news for ya - most of that "science" stuff in old Star Trek is just as much of a fantasy as the Force is.
Absolutely Right(TM).
There hasn't been anything "intellectual" about Star Trek in a long, long time.
I got news for ya - most of that "science" stuff in old Star Trek is just as much of a fantasy as the Force is.
I guess I disagree in that any other time they needed to throw science to the wind to make a story element work, they did in the past as well as in the JJ movie... The moon of Praxis exploding past the neutral zone is about as believable as a supernova that threatens several star systems, wouldn't you say?
Oh, well the supernova in XI was a subspace supernova.
But there is some basis in reality for a lot of the technology in Star Trek and there was effort put into giving some realistic explanation for many things in Star Trek.
Good. Now you know why more people liked Star Trek 2009 than any other Trek in a long time.There has never been any of that in Star Wars and there was none of that in Trek 2009.
As it should be. If you want to start talking about "realism" then you better hope that lead officers of the fleet's most important ships ARE of great minds.In Trek 2009 every single character is now a GENIUS at his/her field of expertise.
Not until later on. And even then it was usually irrelevant to most people and has been cited as the decline of Star Trek starting from TNG on. We called this "technobabble."
Devon said:Good. Now you know why more people liked Star Trek 2009 than any other Trek in a long time.![]()
Devon said:As it should be. If you want to start talking about "realism" then you better hope that lead officers of the fleet's most important ships ARE of great minds.
And I don't think a deep science fiction TNG story would be more of a commercial success than Trek 2009, but it might've been a better movie.
Commercial success and quality don't go hand in hand, unless you think the Transformers movies are some of the greatest works of modern art and cinema.
But does that REALLY make it any more science fiction to add a bullshit word into a sentence of dialogue? I would argue that it makes it more of a fantasy because subspace is pretty much about as real as a midi-chlorian.
This is simply completely untrue.
In ToS they had communicators that flipped open... today we have cell phones.
Again "warp" has a basis in science, hyperdrive does not.
And I don't think a deep science fiction TNG story would be more of a commercial success than Trek 2009, but it might've been a better movie.
Commercial success and quality don't go hand in hand, unless you think the Transformers movies are some of the greatest works of modern art and cinema.
Devon said:But they were all cadets.
I DO think it makes them more of a comparison to StarWars heroes then to the original ToS characters. imo. I mean, Kirk was "destined" to captain the enterprise and Vader was "destined" to bring balance to the force, ya see what I'm getting at there?
See, that's the thing though. It doesn't matter if a TNG movie would have been better, because it (probably) would have been commercially unsuccessful. In fact, Nemesis proved this. This told Paramount that they needed to do something to start getting a decent cash flow out of the Star Trek franchise. Thus, they change the formula and it got them great results monetarily.
6079SmithW said:Also, commercial success and quality don't go hand in hand, but they don't have to. Sure, it is nice if they do, but not required. Commercial success matters much more then quality. If the Transformers movies made, and continue to make, a ton of money, then their quality is irrelevant and they are successful.
I got news for ya - most of that "science" stuff in old Star Trek is just as much of a fantasy as the Force is.
Absolutely Right(TM).
There hasn't been anything "intellectual" about Star Trek in a long, long time.
I got news for ya - most of that "science" stuff in old Star Trek is just as much of a fantasy as the Force is.
Absolutely Right(TM).
There hasn't been anything "intellectual" about Star Trek in a long, long time.
I meant star trek as a whole,TOS,TASTNG,DS9,V ,E AND THE 09 MOVIE
We both know the problem. This new team created a successful movie and restarted the franchise, and there are a bunch of pissed off Star Trek fans who are taking leaps, moving goalposts, and making any excuse possible to rob this film of its legitimate place within the Star Trek franchise, despite the fact that they have absolutely no say in the matter. Sure they can "vote with their wallets" as they always say, but they'll see the film again and again and note in every detail every little thing the film got "wrong," pumping more revenue into the box office and they will do it with every Star Trek film. The option "Don't Go" will never occur to them because let's face it, they are going to be curious they secretly want to like the film even though they like to make all kinds of crazy excuses why they don't.Absolutely Right(TM).
There hasn't been anything "intellectual" about Star Trek in a long, long time.
I meant star trek as a whole,TOS,TASTNG,DS9,V ,E AND THE 09 MOVIE
And that is what I am remarking upon. Where's the problem?
We both know the problem. This new team created a successful movie and restarted the franchise, and there are a bunch of pissed off Star Trek fans who are taking leaps, moving goalposts, and making any excuse possible to rob this film of its legitimate place within the Star Trek franchise, despite the fact that they have absolutely no say in the matter. Sure they can "vote with their wallets" as they always say, but they'll see the film again and again and note in every detail every little thing the film got "wrong," pumping more revenue into the box office and they will do it with every Star Trek film. The option "Don't Go" will never occur to them because let's face it, they are going to be curious they secretly want to like the film even though they like to make all kinds of crazy excuses why they don't.... Where's the problem?
Or.. they just come here and complain to get a reaction from those who think otherwise, never listening to fact, expressing their own opinion like it's Trek Gospel, accusing all others of heresy if they, God forbid, have facts and reality on their side..
There's your problem. No need to bring Michael Bay into this.
MOST things are intellectual when compared to Star Wars.Star Trek is intellectual when you compare it to Star Wars.
Yeah, 20+ years ago when TNG first came out. Since then it's devolved into "If we can depolarize the main deflector array with a phased graviton pulse, it might trigger a cascade reaction in the subspace aperture that will allow us to escape!"I got news for ya - most of that "science" stuff in old Star Trek is just as much of a fantasy as the Force is.
Absolutely Right(TM).
There hasn't been anything "intellectual" about Star Trek in a long, long time.
But there is some basis in reality for a lot of the technology in Star Trek and there was effort put into giving some realistic explanation for many things in Star Trek.
Funny, I don't see you complaining about Spock's unexplained and inexplicable repair work in TWOK. Something about the warp drives means the only way to repair it is to stick your face directly into the main plasma line and hold it there for a few seconds... maybe the dilithium crystals needed a spitshine?There has never been any of that in Star Wars and there was none of that in Trek 2009.
She was a glorified secretary with only a minor supporting role that was ultimately interchangeable with a half dozen extras. The only reason anyone remembers her to begin with is because she was black, and she was HOT.In ToS, Uhura wasn't some genius linguistic officer, she just seemed pretty normal.
In Star Wars they had droids... today we have ASIMO.In ToS they had communicators that flipped open... today we have cell phones.
No more so than hyperdrive. Either can be explained perfectly well if you slap enough technobabble on them. The only difference is Star Wars never bothered to do that, while Star Trek spent ENTIRE EPISODES trying to explain how warp drive worked.Again "warp" has a basis in science
No doubt, which is why STXI and TMP are still oscillating back and forth in my "favorite trek movie of all time" slot. It's basically a tie: STXI has my favorite ACTION Trek while TMP has my favorite ADVENTURE trek. If the next film is anything like TMP, I will be a happy man.And I don't think a deep science fiction TNG story would be more of a commercial success than Trek 2009, but it might've been a better movie.
How does that follow, when Han Solo was mainly introduced as an ANTI-hero who only does the right thing because he's trying to pay off a loan shark?I DO think it makes them more of a comparison to StarWars heroes then to the original ToS characters.
And yet Vader went on to massacre women and children by the bucketloads... I'm not sure how that follows either.I mean, Kirk was "destined" to captain the enterprise and Vader was "destined" to bring balance to the force, ya see what I'm getting at there?
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