My responses to this will be short because I'm only responding for the reasons I listed above:
Posted by Noname Given:
John, I've watched Trek first run since 1969; and I like Enterprise and think it fits into continuity just as well as its prdecessors. ALL Trek series have had major continuity gaffs, and TOS had some of the most egregious within itself.
John Sullivan's comment was unnecessarily dismissive. You don't have to have lived through
Star Trek to be able to fairly comment on it, but your perspective on it will likely be different if you did watch it "live."
John's argument wasn't really about continuity. He doesn't realy get hung up on that stuff, so your response to that isn't really appropriate.
Yes, all the series have had errors, although I disagree that
Star Trek's were the most egregious.
Star Trek was literally making this stuff up as they went along. Later series have had time to reflect on this stuff, and scores of reference material to help them get it right.
The fact is - there has been great material, good materiel, and utter CRAP material written throught the 37 year history of the Trek franchise.
Agreed, but what is your point? Where are you going with this? This doesn't address the two posters you are responding to in any way.
TOS had the best written first season of any show up to that time in TV imo, but that's because GR had actual science fiction writers pen those scripts,...
I'm sure the sci-fi writers helped, but the stories on
Star Trek were simply structured well, sci-fi elements or no.
...OR he plagerized some of the best short science fiction stories out there, and adapted them to Trek. By the second season, after he drove all those writers away with his hamfisted re-writes, the quality started to dip, and by the 3rd season, instead of the occasional clunker, we had the occassional good episode.
This is debatable, but I see your point. But again, where are you going with this? What is your argument?
So, I think again that you tend to look at TOS with very Rose Colored Glasses (tm). As to comparisons with later Trek series:
Some people, maybe, but not myself. I watch
Star Trek with my eyes wide open. I just watched an episode today. I make fun of it all the time. There are a lot of flaws, but the flaws are far outweighed by the things that it got right.
ENT's first two seasons are WAY better written and acted than TNG's first two seasons; are about on par with DS9, and are LIGHT YEARS ahead of the crapfest known as Star Trek Voyager.
This is subjective, of course, but I disagree.
As for the first two seasons of each show:
The Next Generation was choppy, but it took some risks.
Deep Space Nine was a little slow, I'll admit, but they needed time to figure out where they were going with Straczynski's premise. "Voyager" was highly polished, but took no risks.
"Enterprise" takes no risks, tells no stories, develops no characters, and is very, very slow.
It's funny that everytime someone brings up the:
The younger fans don't know better because they never really had a chance to see classic Trek in the context of when it aired. ENT is driving the older fans away because of this...
arguement, they fail to notice the number (and it's quite high) of old fans who chime in with:
It's not perfect, but I still like it.
comments.
This entire argument is specious. You take some general claims that aren't even specifically tied to any posters, and then you refute them with more general claims off the top of your head. If your argument is, "Some people feel one way, some feel another," then you are correct. Of course, this is an obvious statement and needs no proof.
It's just amazing how detractors love to stratify the fanbase, and make general assumptions like:
If you were born after <insert favorite year here>
or
If you became interested in Trek because of <Insert any Trek Series EXCEPT TOS here>.
then you must not be aware of the earlier 'quality level' of TOS.
It's true that
when you joined the fanbase or
which series hooked you is no reason to discredit your opinions. However, I almost never see anyone do this convincingly, and I think
Sullivan's comment was mostly tongue-in-cheek, so again, I'm not sure what you are trying to prove here, other than what is common knowledge and common sense.
That's just total BS. The fact is that the writing quality of the Trek franchise has been all over the spectrum (good to bad) from day one.
Your argument keeps switching from whether one is qualified to talk about the quality to whether there was any quality. Your structure makes it difficult to respond in any meaningful way.
The quality on
Star Trek was very strong in the first two seasons, and less strong in the third.
The Next Generation was at its best in its third and fourth seasons.
Deep Space Nine got better towards the end of the series, after it finally decided what it was going to do with itself. "Voyager" meandered for seven years. "Enterprise" has had two dull years so far. It may get good at any time in the future, but so far, we can only talk about what has been shown on screen.
These are subjective opinions, but I've seen them echoed enough that I don't think I'm wildly going out on a limb here.
It has the distinction of being one of the earliest examples of intelligent science fiction, although I hate to burst your bubble, but the FIRST TV shows to treat Science Fiction with respect were The Twilight Zone followed by the original Outer Limits (watch The Galaxy Being and when you do realize that was produced in 1963).
The Twilight Zone was a better show than
Star Trek. The others you mentioned were not so good.
Again, where are you going with this? You are making a string of interesting assertions, but what is the focus? Is it, "Other shows have fucked up or weren't perfect so you can't say anything bad about
Enterprise"? Is that it?
So, in the end Star Trek was the 3rd show to treat science fiction with some intelligence from the writing perspective.
I disagree with your ranking, but even if I didn't, what does the order of "treating science fiction with intelligence from the writing perspective" have to do with anything?
The Twilight Zone was a great show.
Star Trek was a great show. What does one have to do with the other? What does the order that they were aired have to do with anything? Whose post is any of this in response to, anyway?
What I don't understand of many rabid fans these days is why they have the need to think that Star Trek always has to be:
totally serious (remember TOS' The Trouble With Tribbles?)
Who thinks that? I loved the comedy episodes. So
Star Trek did comedy
and drama well. What's your point?
I haven't seen "Enterprise" do comedy
or drama well yet.
...socially relevent (remeber The Corbomite Manuever? Here was just a classic science fiction story. No social commentary anywhere and it worked well imo).
Who said it has to be socially relevant all the time? Not me.
I loved the science fiction episodes. So
Star Trek did comedy
and drama
and science-fiction well. What's your point?
I haven't seen "Enterprise" do comedy
or drama
or science-fiction well yet.
...written as if it were some sort of litteray classic, or on the same level as say Shakesphere.
On Shakespeare's level? No. Again, who is making these claims that you are refuting? You've defeated a thousand straw men with your post so far, but I need to see some actual names if we are to believe that you are refuting any actual claims.
Many
Star Trek epsiodes
are classics, by television standards -- which I think we can all agree is a much lower standard. Is there any doubt about this? The products and episodes are still selling forty years later.
Star Trek is referred to constantly in every other movie or t.v. show I watch. Kirk and Spock and Scotty are cultural icons. Is there any doubt about this?
In the end, it's entertainment, pure and simple. If they choose and are able to sneak some sort of social commentary in, fine; but this was NEVER even Gene Roddenberry's stated purpose for the show (at least not while he was sane, and before he started believing his own hyped up press after he started taking credit for Gene L. Coon's and everyone else's contributions to Trek).
Not sure what point you are trying to make here, other than taking a few potshots at Roddenberry.
In short, I will never understand the need to turn Trek into a pseudo philosophy of life or the need to rank everything produced in its name up there with the greatest works of literary fiction; and whenever something doesn't live up to that standard, it's automatically crap.
Who is doing this? Name some names? Until then, you are just crashing into windmills.
In the end, Trek is just a collection of entertaining television shows, movies and books. It's neither a philosopy nor a religion.
Agreed. Was there ever any disagreement about this? Ending an essay with an statement that is obvious sounds profound, but if it doesn't jibe with your central argument -- what
was your central argument? -- then it's just hollow words.
Seems a few people liked the sound of them though, so keep it up.
(I have no beef with
Noname Given or his words, but I don't want people thinking that he floored us into silence with his brilliant argument.)