Oh, and it also had perhaps the best music soundtrack of the movies.
Hmm. I don't remember the music . . . I should check it out.
When I'm writing Trek, I mostly listen to the soundtracks for KHAN, FIRST CONTACT, and STAR TREK (2009.)
Oh, and it also had perhaps the best music soundtrack of the movies.
JJ Abrams' vision of Earth doesn't jive with what was stated in Star Trek pre-2009. On a world with no crime, what need would there be for a police force? (I know it's an idiotic question; however, police were created to solve and prevent crimes. No crime, no police.)
Although it gets panned (unfairly), for me the most 'Trek' like movie was Star Trek V The Final Frontier.
Of all the movies, it had the best interaction between the 'big three' and is still a delight to watch.
Oh, and it also had perhaps the best music soundtrack of the movies.
Thing is, I remember Tom Paris talking about being mugged once on Earth. No one believed him until he explained it was part of some prank to generate tourism or something.
24th century Earth seems to have no civilian law enforcement. Sisko got stabbed in the streets of Earth while on a leave of absence and it was Starfleet which investigated the crime and arrested the guy that stabbed him. Why the hell is the military called in just because some guy got stabbed?
24th century Earth seems to have no civilian law enforcement. Sisko got stabbed in the streets of Earth while on a leave of absence and it was Starfleet which investigated the crime and arrested the guy that stabbed him. Why the hell is the military called in just because some guy got stabbed?
When they said these absolutist statements, they were referring to the planet Earth exclusively. It is described as a paradise. There are pockets of the Federation where there is crime, disease, and poverty.
Like many of you, I've watched the new Trek teaser trailer more than once and no matter where I see it, there are a lot of comments made saying "this isn't very Star Trek...". To try to simplify things for me, what would make this movie, (yes I know, we haven't seen the movie yet) or even the last movie "more Trek?" Would it be more Trek if it were more lighthearted? If so in this day and age would that lightheartedness be considered some what antiquated? Would maintaining a strict continuity and having positive messages make it more Trek? What exactly would make it more Trek? Or has Trek simply evolved to the point where it shows you the good and bad of the universe?
As for lawyers, I remember what Melinda Snodgrass said. She said that when presenting her story, "The Measure of a Man", for approval to Gene Roddenberry, that he said emphatically that there are no lawyers. Humans have found other ways to settle their differences A producer on the show had a private meeting with the guy, and the next day Roddenberry had backed down..
JJ Abrams has brought Star Trek back to its TOS roots, where Earth isn't a paradise and humans have interpersonal conflicts.
When they said these absolutist statements, they were referring to the planet Earth exclusively. It is described as a paradise. There are pockets of the Federation where there is crime, disease, and poverty.
There is one asylum for the insane - the Elba II Colony. And, when the Enterprise visited the colony, the Federation had developed a new drug to cure insanity. The other colony on Tantalus was for those who committed criminal acts and weren't regarded as insane. They were rehabilitated.
As for lawyers, I remember what Melinda Snodgrass said. She said that when presenting her story, "The Measure of a Man", for approval to Gene Roddenberry, that he said emphatically that there are no lawyers. Humans have found other ways to settle their differences A producer on the show had a private meeting with the guy, and the next day Roddenberry had backed down.
Roddenberry had a negative influence on the later Star Trek (TNG, DS9, VOY). His vision of an Earth as a perfect paradise and where humans don't have interpersonal conflicts lead to stories in which conflict had to be introduced from an outside agency. This created a nightmare for the writers. Roddenberry's ideology had poisoned his creation. JJ Abrams has brought Star Trek back to its TOS roots, where Earth isn't a paradise and humans have interpersonal conflicts.
Considering that we have decoded the genetic code of our species and are developing techniques to detect flaws in that code, it's conceivable in the future that people who might have tendencies towards violent and criminal behavior could be identified early on and treated. This wouldn't take away interpersonal conflicts.
No matter how they described Earth in shows like TNG and DS9, when they showed it the planet looked like a gated upper middle class American suburb.
I liked to think that the new movies a bit more rock-n-roll. Which is a good thing.
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