Honestly, there's nothing in this sentence I find accurate. There's no evidence adduced to prove that fans of original Trek are a "small" group. There's likewise no evidence that they are "generally older." Thus, the statement remains questionable even with your caveats included. (And of course, it also begs the question: "small" and "older" compared to what, exactly?)
that covet the TOS era as "The Golden Age of Star Trek."
Does that clear it up at all? I can understand how omitting parts of the sentence make comprehending and analyzing it difficult...
The sarcasm is uncalled-for. I'm disappointed that you seem to have taken my last post personally, but honestly I didn't intend it that way. I was merely trying to express, as methodically as possible, my difficulties with the claim you were making.
Those difficulties remain. And I think, if you read my last post
in toto, you'll see that I did address the entire sentence quoted, and that I've already dealt with the objections you raise here.
The fact is, absent some specific examples, it's unfair of you to posit
any group of Trek fans "who covet the TOS era as the golden age"... much less to make any claims about the demographics of that group. (Incidentally, the word "covet" seems somewhat less than apt here, since its primary meaning suggests a desire to
possess the object of the sentence... which, given the existence of DVDs, is actually entirely possible, but unrelated to the existence of this movie. I assume you meant something more like "regard.")
Moreover, even if you can point to evidence that such a group exists, you haven't put forward any evidence that Abrams, O&K actually made any creative decisions to "appease" these people. In fact, you've actually painted yourself into something of a logical corner, since the smaller this alleged cohort of fans is, the
less reason the filmmakers would have to try to appease them at all, and the harder it is to demonstrate that they did so.
Essentially, you're arguing that the filmmakers targeted their work to an audience predisposed to dislike it... which simply makes no sense. I've already provided a far likelier explanation for their decision to use the Kirk-era characters... so what other example(s) did you have in mind?
Withers said:
I wasn't talking about just TOS fans in general because, much to the chagrin of some, there are TOS fans who didn't have a problem with the new movie. The people who think that way (remember to take the full sentence not just the first half) are generally older and it is a comparatively smaller group than... you know, people who don't think that. I could probably make a pie chart if that would help?
Or perhaps you could just think about the logical implications of your own statements. In this case, for instance, you're implying that those TOS fans who disliked this movie are
coextensive with the "small, older... golden age" group you posited... which is obviously an easy thing to disprove, merely by pointing to examples of people who are critical of the film yet don't meet your description. I used myself as one such example, but there are plenty of others in these forums.
Moreover, the larger argument in which the debatable sentence was lodged went on to assert that "that group of fans won't be happy with anything but acting appropriate for the 1960's and the special effects to match and... the people who
were happy with this film would have likely been
just as happy with different characters." I've already disposed of one set of unsupported assumptions in this part (re: what the film's critics actually want), and I hope I don't have to spell out how unsupported the other part is (re: what the film's fans would have enjoyed).
When all is said and done, you just seem to be complaining that the movie used Kirk/Spock et al., whom you apparently don't care for for some unexplained reason, and backfilling a number of superficially logical but actually unsustainable generalizations to rationalize that complaint.
Withers said:
Your brand of fandom won't be happy with anything new that is provided unless it is some sort of carbon copy of what has already been done (whether its the actors, the effects, the stories- I've heard it all. It boils down to this being nothing like that and thus a point of contention.)
In other words, you're disregarding the
actual criticisms that I and others have put forward, instead stereotyping us all as impossible-to-please on the basis of unrelated and unsupported assumptions about our desires and motivations? You think you understand our discontent better than we do, and thus see no need to respond to criticisms on their actual merits? That seems rather presumptuous.
Withers said:
You also seem to be under the impression that I'm deeply in love with this film and like it above anything else that ever came before it. That's simply not the case. The film has holes big enough to fly the Death Star through and I get it.
I don't recall posting anything to suggest you viewed the film as the best thing since sliced bread. For the record, though, if you do recognize its flaws, why are you taking such pains to defend it and distinguish yourself from its critics?
Withers said:
Since the fans who care about TOS enough to be delighted by seeing those characters return in a movie likely won't be satiated by attempts to be true to the original (as evidenced)...
As evidenced where? How? You haven't pointed to
any "attempts to be true to the original" (although, I reiterate, most of my criticisms of the movie
aren't about that anyway).
Withers said:
...since those of us who were "fine with it" (in varying degrees) probably wouldn't care any way... why make it about TOS at all?
I've already answered that once: a calculation of mass-market expectations. You still haven't responded to that answer.
... I think SheliakBob does seem to convey that he regards TOS in a manner it would seem fair to call "a golden age", and that he objects *in principle* to rewrites.
Okay. I haven't really seen his posts (or anyone else's) that way, but maybe. While it's possible that some people may simply object to a reboot on principle, though (and in a sense I can understand that; one might argue that it diminishes the significance of TOS as a cultural artifact in its own right, and turns it more explicitly into a corporate product), that doesn't actually mean such people would automatically consider the film to be a bad movie. Thus, again, criticism of the concept is logically distinct from criticism of the execution.
BurntSynapse said:
Its a question of competence. JJA+Co claimed their schedule was frantic, when (as is typical in project scheduling) they worked backward from the release date and discovered they lacked adequate time for writing... As Hanlon said: "Never ascribe to malice that which is adequately explained by incompetence, ignorance, or stupidity."
This is interesting. I hadn't read that they'd made any claims along those lines. I know there were some issues regarding the timing of the Writers Guild strike, but that was true for lots of projects. (Besides which, the release date got pushed back six months.) Is there a link you could point to where they discuss this?