I've been on a Movie Marathon for the last week or so, rewatching all six of the Classic Cast movies (that's the explanation for my series of posts recently.)
Something I just realized about TUC (which I rewatched just yesterday): it's the only one of the six classic movies that does *not* feature, as its central plot point, the results or implications of using advanced (either cutting-edge or beyond its own time) technology for its own sake.
Two of the movies (TMP and TVH) feature alien technology, beyond the power of Starfleet to understand or cope with, being sent to disrupt life on Earth for different motivations. (One probe was returning a primitive piece of our own technology; the other was in search of one of our previous planet-mate species that had disappeared.)
I'd place TFF in the "super-advanced alien technology" category as well, at least according to Clarke's Third Law: "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." The God creature at the center of the galaxy certainly seemed magically powerful, but the point of the movie is that he wasn't "really" God. (This is also the context of TNG, which had by then established that humanity could eventually evolve to share qualities with the super-advanced Q.)
The other two movies featured our own human technology that got out of control and turned around to bite us in the rear. Specifically Khan's advanced genetics from TWOK (superior ability breeds superior ambition), or the Genesis planet (especially in TSFS) which was created through technological shortcuts that destroyed its potential before it ever really got going -- and almost took Our Heroes along with it when it destroyed itself.
So the theme of the first five movies seem to be related to the consequences of either encountering or developing advanced technology, and either responding to or abusing the power that comes with it.
TUC is the odd one out in this theme. The only "new technology" in this movie was the Klingon ship that could fire when cloaked, but that technology wasn't "backfiring" in the way of Khan or Genesis -- and it wasn't "incomprehensible" in the way of V'Ger, the Whale Probe, or the God Creature. It was only there to move the real plot along. And the real plot was related to the heroes themselves, overcoming their own prejudices to save the day again.
I'd say that makes TUC especially a fitting tribute to the characters we loved and were saying goodbye to.
Something I just realized about TUC (which I rewatched just yesterday): it's the only one of the six classic movies that does *not* feature, as its central plot point, the results or implications of using advanced (either cutting-edge or beyond its own time) technology for its own sake.
Two of the movies (TMP and TVH) feature alien technology, beyond the power of Starfleet to understand or cope with, being sent to disrupt life on Earth for different motivations. (One probe was returning a primitive piece of our own technology; the other was in search of one of our previous planet-mate species that had disappeared.)
I'd place TFF in the "super-advanced alien technology" category as well, at least according to Clarke's Third Law: "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." The God creature at the center of the galaxy certainly seemed magically powerful, but the point of the movie is that he wasn't "really" God. (This is also the context of TNG, which had by then established that humanity could eventually evolve to share qualities with the super-advanced Q.)
The other two movies featured our own human technology that got out of control and turned around to bite us in the rear. Specifically Khan's advanced genetics from TWOK (superior ability breeds superior ambition), or the Genesis planet (especially in TSFS) which was created through technological shortcuts that destroyed its potential before it ever really got going -- and almost took Our Heroes along with it when it destroyed itself.
So the theme of the first five movies seem to be related to the consequences of either encountering or developing advanced technology, and either responding to or abusing the power that comes with it.
TUC is the odd one out in this theme. The only "new technology" in this movie was the Klingon ship that could fire when cloaked, but that technology wasn't "backfiring" in the way of Khan or Genesis -- and it wasn't "incomprehensible" in the way of V'Ger, the Whale Probe, or the God Creature. It was only there to move the real plot along. And the real plot was related to the heroes themselves, overcoming their own prejudices to save the day again.
I'd say that makes TUC especially a fitting tribute to the characters we loved and were saying goodbye to.