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What would Roddenberry think?

6. An even further dystopian look in the future, as Checkov is only 17, and was thus allowed into the academy between 13 and 15 years old - essentially allowing child soldiers.


Wesley Crusher took the entrance exam when he was 15. Had he passed he would have been allowed in the Academy despite still only being a child.
 
I think 'The Cage', 'TMP', and 'TNG' are the most like Gene's original vision for Trek. Think about it. Those three productions have more in common than you think.

I think Gene had good ideas, but he did need to be surrounded by other writers. His take on Trek could be a bit...dull...at times.
 
Nerys Myk said:
You got a list?[/I]

Except for Uhura who helped discover the threat.

Which would be one of the problems. You see, she did not "discover the threat", or at least, it should have been impossible for her to "discover the threat". (Rather she didn't, she was oblivious to the threat it's only Kirk who put 2 and 15 and 326 togehter and came up with 6, which by sheer luck was the right answer, but that's another matter.)
Key word being helped

The one's who should have "discovered the threat" should be anyone else in the 4,000 lightyear wide UFP, most notably Starfleet and Starfleet Intelligence listening posts along the Klingon border, whose sole job is to discover these kinds of threats. They should have discovered the threat, and the fact that they didn't, and Uhura through no capability of her own, just got lucky her communications station is the only one in the entire UFP to detect the battle, makes her just lucky, but no more capable, and the rest of the UFP complete and utter incapable morons.
Nah it should be a character we know. Not nameless faceless FedIntelOps guy. Thats why we watch these movies to see our heroes do stuff.

Of course, the fact she then didn't tell any superior officer of what she found, or she wouldn't have needed to tell Pike later on, proves that she's every bit the moron the rest of the UFP is, not to mention she's in dereliction of duty.

Drama!!!! Come on this is fiction. Its going to unfold in a way that is dramatic, just as it has in all previous Treks.

Yeah, in case you hadn't noticed, but TOS was filmed in the 1960s, for the 1960s what we saw was incredibly progressive. We're now in the 21st century, things should have gotten better, not stay the same if you're very, very optimistic, and worse if you're realistic.
Having lived through the 1960s I'm more than familiar with the differences between then and now. More so what hasn't changed. That the modern version of the Uhura character is more than a glorified telephone operator that gets frightened is progress.

(Not that you're right about Uhura doing more in the movie, I remember her repairing a circuit board, and there's Mirror Mirror and on and on. More importantly, she actually did her duty, she did not hang onto a man, that was reserved for Chapel and Rand. Wow, the most progressive of the female characters of TOS, and they reduced her to 60s sexist caricature female character - worse. You're also wrong about the guest actresses doing less than Kirk's mother, they usually did a lot more.)
Being a black woman I doubt folks in the 1960s would approve of her "hanging onto" any of the male leads in the show. 2009 Uhura gets to have a relationship with a lead and contribute to solving the problem at hand.


Nope, not even close. You see, if Orci and Kurtzman knew even a little of Quantum Theory, they would know that Alternate Realities is not "the most tested theory in science", it's a flight of fancy with not really any real evidence behind. They would know, that Quantum Theory is a lot bloody more than "alternate realities" every single thing, except one odd instance and only with one odd theoretical idea based upon it, has got nothing to do with "alternate realities".
Thats whay is called Science Fiction, Star Trek is not a documentary about current science theory. Never has been. Its primary goal is to Entertain.

If they had bothered to do some research, or the production had a science advisor as Star Trek had for the past 30 years, they'd know black holes don't even come close to working the way they were depicted in the movie.
The science advisor on the film was Carolyn Porco PhD. Works for NASA.

If they had bothered to do some research, they'd know super novas work even less as it was portrayed on screen.
It worked the way it needed to for the plot and wasnt a typical Super Nova. The term a touchstone for those in the audience with out advanced degrees. Movies do that a lot. even Star Trek movies.

And if they had bothered to do some research into science, how it works, and how things are named, they'd know the name "Red Matter" is stupid. Names describe a substance or its peculiarities. Dark Matter is peculiar because it is dark. "Red Matter" is not peculiar because it is red.
Its just a quick easy name for the audience to remember. Most of whom realy dont give a damn about how things are named. Given more time I'm sure they could have worked in a subplot on how science names things. Remember this is a show full of "quick and easy" names like Vulcan (its hot!), Romulan (likr Rome), Caitian ( for a feline species!!!:guffaw:) and phaser ( because it sounded like laser) Lets not ascribe a level of "sophistication" to past Treks that did not exist.

Result being, we know they know jack shit about science apart from some buzz words and the non-scientists complete miss-understanding of science, and dropped it in.
We no nothing of the sort. We just know that they wrote a film they hoped would be accessable.

Which only makes it worse, doesn't it? I'm trained in fencing! (Not Kendo or Japanese fencing, but fencing.) And I use a Katana! Yay! They weer so completely unable to divorce their stereotype of Asians with katanas that they had the Asian claim a European sword-fighting style, and then pull out the Katana (which would not be so good for the European sword-fighting style, I tell you.)
Not really.

1. Building in space is FAR safer. There's no gravity to in many different ways instantly reduce you to mush. Any danger in space is slow killing, and they can by the 23rd century be easily protected against.

2. For them to build on the ground instead, means that there are no people already living and working in space, as in, those who constructed ships before there was anti-gravity. That means, no space station, no space docks, no lunar colony, no Mars colony, no space stations and colonies on or around any other planet of our solar system.

3. This result in a humany either irrationally deathly afraid of space (through bad or deliberate miss-education), or one of complete apathy toward space. Both would never be able to build the Federation and be spread far and wide through space. In short, a dystopian society, and one that completely contrary to what is show, could never have built the UFP.
Cant say I disagree with 1. 2 and 3 just show you're over thinking it. It was buikd on the ground because they needed it to be in the same shot as Kirk to give the scene an "ooh ahhhh look at that" moment. Wouldn't have worked in space. Again its a movie. And as a movie it need to hit certain notes that resonate with the audience. (nitpickers be damned) Your read while interesting has little to do with the why of the scene. Might make for some interesting fanfic. Hopefully not written by you, because while you have a flair for the dramatic, you lack a flair for drama.

Nope, not hyperbole at all.
If you say so. Your word choice tells me otherwise.

But not because they chose to, not because of their own free will, only because destiny forced them to, made them. They're minds were not their own. A supernatural force that steers things to save the day; the very anti-thesis of Star Trek.
What Supernatural force is that? Old Spock? Maybe, he did say being a Starship Captain was Kirk first, best destiny. Pike? All he did was suggest Kirk put his talents to use in a way they help sentientkind. No supernatural puppet masters.

Less than four, yep, hence, the fifteen years number I gave. In case you hadn't noticed, he IS Andrew Wiggin at Battle School. He went to Starfleet Academy, that is a MILITARY Academy, it IS a battle school. And the fact that he's a whiz kid matters not; he's not an adult, so no matter how smart, he should not have been allowed in Starfleet Academy.
See the Wes Crusher comment made by someone else. Starfleet Academy is more than a Battle School.

Yeah, I remember when Bonanza dealt with the Vietnam war. Oh, wait a minute, no it didn't.
Vietnam and Bonanza are not the whole of the Sixties and the issues at play at that time. I was there, were you?

That was because in the 60s that was about the only way to get to a lot of people. And it was only obvious to children before they got indoctrinated by their parents, and the few who like Gene realized the same thing. For a large amount of people though, no so obvious. Hell, it isn't obvious to a quite a few people today, and even they still need a sledge hammer to get it rammed into their brains.
Once I was there, were you? Even in the Sixties ( the Seventies) we saw the hammer and had to :rolleyes:

No, it was NOT a theme at all, it didn't even come ffing close. To boot, they can't embrace their destiny, destiny FORCES them to follow their destiny whether they like it or not, manipulates them into that destiny. That's the exact opposite of essence of Star Trek.
No, they need to become the characters we know thats what the movie was about. Getting them to that point. No idea where your getting this destiny is forcing them into it angle.

If you didn't have your head stuck in the sand, fingers in your ears, yelling, "I don't care, I don't care, I like this and that's it, and to hell with everything Star Trek has ever done, what any documentary about the essence of Star Trek has every shown, what any book about Star Trek has ever written, what any person including Gene Roddenberry has said in interviews", you would know they ARE Roddenberry's. In fact, I even friggin' all but quoted him on occasion.
I've little tolerance for fanatics, true believers and fundamenalist of any stripe. The ones who work themselves into a tizzy over a movie are just easier to laugh at than the ones with access to high explosives.

I've read and seen a lot of material about Star Trek (Just finished reading Solow and Justman's book) and I cant say that ST09 runs counter to any of the ideas expressed there in.

If you want to quote Roddenberry to prove your point, then "friggin" quote him. Dont Play St Paul to his Jesus.



It isn't.
Really?
crushing the spirit of Star Trek"
isn't hyperpole???

It caused Nero and Spock to travel back in time and created an alternate reality. Not out of the question in the the realm of Trek science. From what I've seen the writers read quite a bit about black holes before writing the film.

Then you obviously don't know much if anything at all about Black Holes.

I didn't claim to. All I said was that it fits with Star Trek "science". Where a sling shot around the sun or escaping a "black star" lets you travel in time. Where people from different planets can produce offspring. Where transporter accidents can split you in two or send you to an alternate reality.
That they used more fiction than science doesn't mean a lack of effort.

They used no science at all. They just dropped buzz words
So its a Star Trek film then.
 
Nerys Myk said:
You got a list?[/I]

Which would be one of the problems. You see, she did not "discover the threat", or at least, it should have been impossible for her to "discover the threat". (Rather she didn't, she was oblivious to the threat it's only Kirk who put 2 and 15 and 326 togehter and came up with 6, which by sheer luck was the right answer, but that's another matter.)
Key word being helped

No, she didn't help at all, neither did Kirk, for that matter. Once Kirk finally convinces Pike that indeed something is going on, and they shouldn't just drop into the Vulcan system without a plan first, they drop into the Vulcan system without a plan - result being: NOTHING AT ALL! One of the many, many, many, many weak, no, horribly bad writing in this movie.

Nah it should be a character we know. Not nameless faceless FedIntelOps guy. Thats why we watch these movies to see our heroes do stuff.
Then you must use it such a matter it makes sense. Not that it matters

Drama!!!! Come on this is fiction. Its going to unfold in a way that is dramatic, just as it has in all previous Treks.
Except that if there are so many, and so big plotholes in the movie it isn't dramatic, let alone drama, because you just look at the screen with dropped jaw going, :confused: :wtf: :eek: :guffaw:

Having lived through the 1960s I'm more than familiar with the differences between then and now. More so what hasn't changed. That the modern version of the Uhura character is more than a glorified telephone operator that gets frightened is progress.
Excpet that the new Uhura is NOT more than a glorified telephone operator, quite the contrary, TOS Uhura was LESS a glorified telephone operator than the new Uhura. Which was rather the original point.

Being a black woman I doubt folks in the 1960s would approve of her "hanging onto" any of the male leads in the show.
Yeah, I never said she did, quite the contrary, but . . . reading.

2009 Uhura gets to have a relationship with a lead and contribute to solving the problem at hand.
She didn't contribute, at all.

Thats whay is called Science Fiction, Star Trek is not a documentary about current science theory. Never has been. Its primary goal is to Entertain.
No, it's called Science Fiction. The goal is to entertain through the exploration of (potential) scientific concepts having an impact upon humanity and/or exploring present day humanity through the allegory of such.

You can create scientific concepts that contradict present day idea in science as long as those ideas aren't ironclad facts. However, if you've got ironclad facts that we've seen with our very own eyes with only a telescope to help out, you don't get to contradict those.

The science advisor on the film was Carolyn Porco PhD. Works for NASA.
1. Prove it.

2. If it's true, they didn't get their money's worth there, did they?

Or...

3. They completely ignored her, which begs the question: what's the point of hiring her if you're just going to ignore her?

It worked the way it needed to for the plot and wasnt a typical Super Nova. The term a touchstone for those in the audience with out advanced degrees.
Actually, it WAS a typical super nova, because the movie never claimed anything different. Result being, it was a pile of shit. Even a hyper nova doesn't do what this super nova did, not even the most impressive subspace-based Star Trek nova can do what this movie claimed it did, as it defied all logic, as it could apparently obliterate a planet lightyears away, but a rinky dink little science vessel and a mere mining ship could pass through that very same shockwave that destroys planets without a scratch on them.

Movies do that a lot. even Star Trek movies.
And every movie that does, is a pile of shit, especially Science Fiction movies.

Its just a quick easy name for the audience to remember. Most of whom realy dont give a damn about how things are named. Given more time I'm sure they could have worked in a subplot on how science names things. Remember this is a show full of "quick and easy" names like Vulcan (its hot!), Romulan (likr Rome), Caitian ( for a feline species!!!:guffaw:) and phaser ( because it sounded like laser) Lets not ascribe a level of "sophistication" to past Treks that did not exist.
If so many people don't care about naming, they could have put in a few additional efforts and come up with something that doesn't sound like it came from an idiot to anyone with more than a little passing knowledge of science.

This ridiculous idea that just because a good chunk of the people are ignorant morons, you must write something that only ignorant morons can enjoy, is just pure ridiculousness.

And yes, the past Treks ALL had that sophistication. None of the names that you mentioned are ridiculous. Hell, most of the names you mentioned, would just be the human names for them, humans tend to do that; put names to things that fit their ideas. Like the Rihannsu, they have very different names for themselves.

We no nothing of the sort. We just know that they wrote a film they hoped would be accessable.
We do know, we can see it.

Cant say I disagree with 1. 2 and 3 just show you're over thinking it. It was buikd on the ground because they needed it to be in the same shot as Kirk to give the scene an "ooh ahhhh look at that" moment. Wouldn't have worked in space. Again its a movie. And as a movie it need to hit certain notes that resonate with the audience. (nitpickers be damned) Your read while interesting has little to do with the why of the scene. Might make for some interesting fanfic.
The why of the scene doesn't matter. What it represents DOES. And it COULD have worked in space, hell, with Earth as a backdrop it could have worked BETTER.

But that's besides the point.

To anyone who has a functioning brain, and likes to engage it during movies, IT DOES NOT RESONATE. On the contrary, you get the absolute disgust I feel when I see that because I understand the consequences of 23rd century Star Trek Earth being reduced to building on the ground.

This is a Science Fiction movie. It's supposed to engage the brain. It's not supposed to give pretty pictures for ignorant morons to go "ooh" over.

Hopefully not written by you, because while you have a flair for the dramatic, you lack a flair for drama.
I've got plenty flair for drama.

What Supernatural force is that? Old Spock? Maybe, he did say being a Starship Captain was Kirk first, best destiny. Pike? All he did was suggest Kirk put his talents to use in a way they help sentientkind. No supernatural puppet masters.
The supernatural force that made Nero put Spock on the same planet that held Scotty, and made Spock Jr put Kirk on that very same planet. You know, the explanation for the 'coincidence', "destiny is converging back on its original path."

It was all but outright stated by Old Spock, and in a bit of cut dialog it was outright stated by Old Spock.

See the Wes Crusher comment made by someone else. Starfleet Academy is more than a Battle School.
That it teaches other things does not matter, that it is a military school is. And Wesley did NOT join Starfleet Academy at 15, quite the contrary. Just because he gets to take the entrance exam, doesn't mean he gets enter at 15.

Vietnam and Bonanza are not the whole of the Sixties and the issues at play at that time. I was there, were you?
Go on, name ONE show in the entire sixties that dealt with Vietnam other than Star Trek. Just one.

The simple fact ultimately is though; it does not matter. What Gene Roddenberry used Star Trek for, DOES. And the fact that this new pile of shit didn't even come in the neighborhood of trying to produce anything resembling this, is the problem.

Once I was there, were you? Even in the Sixties ( the Seventies) we saw the hammer and had to :rolleyes:
You maybe, as a kid, as the enlightened few. The rest, not so much.

No, they need to become the characters we know thats what the movie was about. Getting them to that point.
The aren't the characters we knew, they did not become the characters we knew. Quite the contrary, Kirk is an a-hole at the beginning and an a-hole at the end. Spock decided with his logic or contrary to his logic to start a relationship with one of his students, which is as far removed from the Spock we knew as we can get. And I can go on and on.

No idea where your getting this destiny is forcing them into it angle.
Spock, Kirk, Scotty - same planet, coincidence? Nope. Listen to Spock's little speech, fill in the blanks, listen to the dialog they cut.

I've little tolerance for fanatics, true believers and fundamenalist of any stripe. The ones who work themselves into a tizzy over a movie are just easier to laugh at than the ones with access to high explosives.
:rolleyes:

I've read and seen a lot of material about Star Trek (Just finished reading Solow and Justman's book) and I cant say that ST09 runs counter to any of the ideas expressed there in.
Of course not. Every documentary about Star Trek I've seen ever always talk about the human condition being explored, and present day events through allegory, not to mention Gene's documented secular humanism and him infusing this in Star Trek, and STXI didn't have anything even close to resembling that, but it doesn't run counter to that, nah, not at all.

Willful ignorance is worse that just ignorance. At the least the latter part has a chance to be remedied.

If you want to quote Roddenberry to prove your point, then "friggin" quote him. Dont Play St Paul to his Jesus.
:rolleyes:

Really? isn't hyperpole???
Nope.

I didn't claim to. All I said was that it fits with Star Trek "science". Where a sling shot around the sun or escaping a "black star" lets you travel in time. Where people from different planets can produce offspring. Where transporter accidents can split you in two or send you to an alternate reality.
That they used more fiction than science doesn't mean a lack of effort.
They used no science at all. They just dropped buzz words
So its a Star Trek film then.
Wrong. None of those are contradicting cold hard facts, nor is doing nothing but dropping buzz words. Some events are improbable, and weak, but they don't contradict cold hard facts AT ALL, anywhere, even close. In fact, going faster than light in science is often viewed as immediate time travel to the past, so slingshot around a star, an additional gravitational and thus space-time bending object at FTL speeds, is actually quite reasonable as something that may cause you to travel through time.
 
Excpet that the new Uhura is NOT more than a glorified telephone operator, quite the contrary, TOS Uhura was LESS a glorified telephone operator than the new Uhura. Which was rather the original point.

I really have to wonder if you've ever seen Arena or City on the Edge of Forever. I'm sure there are more examples, but those are two of the best (worst?) ones. All Uhura seems to be able to do is answer the phone and get scared. The STXI one has more confidence and seems more adept and well-rounded in her job (knowing alien languages and such).
 
Excpet that the new Uhura is NOT more than a glorified telephone operator, quite the contrary, TOS Uhura was LESS a glorified telephone operator than the new Uhura. Which was rather the original point.

I really have to wonder if you've ever seen Arena or City on the Edge of Forever. I'm sure there are more examples, but those are two of the best (worst?) ones. All Uhura seems to be able to do is answer the phone and get scared. The STXI one has more confidence and seems more adept and well-rounded in her job (knowing alien languages and such).

And there are also episodes where all that Sulu did was push a button and say: "Firing phasers."

It's a television series, with 60s sensibilities of focusing on the 2/3 stars and the rest are there mostly for eye candy to boot. You can't haver he be fully in the story every single episode. It's the episodes where she did more than just be a telephone operator that you have to look at. Mirror Mirror for example, the episode where she repaired the circuit board - I can never remember the title of that one, and other similar episodes.

In contrast, we've got a 21st century MOVIE, where Uhura does what? Jack shit, that's what.
 
I have to agree with 3d master. The movie was "fun" if you don't know anything about trek, or are just a casual viewer. If you are a fan, you had to turn off your brain in order to enjoy it. It's really a far cry from Roddenberry's vision and style. Whether he would have liked the money or not, I don't know, but I know that he wouldn't have liked the film.
 
Whether he would have liked the money or not, I don't know, but I know that he wouldn't have liked the film.

No, you don't. You believe that he wouldn't have liked the film, but that belief is based on an interpretation you possess of his "vision" -- which you erroneously describe in static terms, as though he actually had the same "vision" throughout his career, when he clearly did not, as a casual glance at his scripts for TOS, TMP, and TNG will reveal.

Personally, I believe that the Gene Roddenberry who wrote TOS would have enjoyed ST09 and that the Gene Roddenberry behind TNG would have hated it. Personally, I think that the TOS Gene Roddenberry was a much better writer than the TNG Gene Roddenberry, so I'm not bothered by this.
 
Personally, I believe that the Gene Roddenberry who wrote TOS would have enjoyed ST09 and that the Gene Roddenberry behind TNG would have hated it. Personally, I think that the TOS Gene Roddenberry was a much better writer than the TNG Gene Roddenberry, so I'm not bothered by this.

That's very well put. I thought the same thing, but you put it much better. Gene started out wanting to make a fun show - that made you think, but still a fun show - but in the end, he bought into that whole "vision" hype, or at least that's how it seems to me. I expect that's one (though not the only) reason the two earliest seasons of TNG tended to be so...heavy-handed. The show got so much more interesting once he was no longer directly involved (at least Wiki says he wasn't directly involved after that).
 
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Nerys Myk said:
Having lived through the 1960s I'm more than familiar with the differences between then and now. More so what hasn't changed. That the modern version of the Uhura character is more than a glorified telephone operator that gets frightened is progress.

Exactly. Another TOS geezer, here - Uhura is a far more important character in Abrams's movie than in the original series, and is one of the greater improvements introduced in nuTrek.

If you are a fan, you had to turn off your brain in order to enjoy it.

No, you don't, except in the sense that one does in order to watch a good deal of Trek TOS..or TNG...or DS9...or VOY...or ENT. All of Trek has its logical and dramatic failings, both internally and in comparison to other fiction. It also has its strengths. And Roddenberry was a far more canny and worldly producer than folks who prefer him as a creative sage often acknowledge.

The new version of Trek has elevated the property's profile and would have enhanced his own reputation as well as bringing him back into the public spotlight yet again. He'd have loved it.
 
Nerys Myk said:
Having lived through the 1960s I'm more than familiar with the differences between then and now. More so what hasn't changed. That the modern version of the Uhura character is more than a glorified telephone operator that gets frightened is progress.

Exactly. Another TOS geezer, here - Uhura is a far more important character in Abrams's movie than in the original series, and is one of the greater improvements introduced in nuTrek.

Exactly. In TOS, the "ethnic" characters, while progressive for their age, were still background characters only there to be living background set pieces for the "Big Three" white guys. In ST09, by contrast, Uhura is part of the "Big Three" -- McCoy is sidelined much more than she is -- and she's really the heart and soul of the piece, the conscience who keeps Kirk and Spock in check when they're getting ready to hose the deck with testosterone.
 
Here's how much Uhura and Sulu mattered to the producers and writers of TOS in the 1960s:

They don't have full names. The white guys have full names, including Pavel Chekov who was added a year after the others.

The reasons are most likely a combination of the fact that Uhura and Sulu were minor characters and the fact that they were "exotics" - like Spock, who notably although he's much more important also lacked a proper full name (although a first season writer inserted a reference to its supposed existence as a script joke).
 
Nerys Myk said:
Having lived through the 1960s I'm more than familiar with the differences between then and now. More so what hasn't changed. That the modern version of the Uhura character is more than a glorified telephone operator that gets frightened is progress.

Exactly. Another TOS geezer, here - Uhura is a far more important character in Abrams's movie than in the original series, and is one of the greater improvements introduced in nuTrek.

Exactly. In TOS, the "ethnic" characters, while progressive for their age, were still background characters only there to be living background set pieces for the "Big Three" white guys. In ST09, by contrast, Uhura is part of the "Big Three"

No, she isn't, she's still just a glorified telephone operator.

-- McCoy is sidelined much more than she is -- and she's really the heart and soul of the piece, the conscience who keeps Kirk and Spock in check when they're getting ready to hose the deck with testosterone.

No, she's not, and she never does. She's barely even in the background, except when she has to hang around Spock's neck.
 
Whether he would have liked the money or not, I don't know, but I know that he wouldn't have liked the film.

No, you don't. You believe that he wouldn't have liked the film, but that belief is based on an interpretation you possess of his "vision" -- which you erroneously describe in static terms, as though he actually had the same "vision" throughout his career, when he clearly did not, as a casual glance at his scripts for TOS, TMP, and TNG will reveal.

Personally, I believe that the Gene Roddenberry who wrote TOS would have enjoyed ST09 and that the Gene Roddenberry behind TNG would have hated it. Personally, I think that the TOS Gene Roddenberry was a much better writer than the TNG Gene Roddenberry, so I'm not bothered by this.

It's easy to compare previous movies and shows, and STXI and see that it's different. If you took an IQ test, and the question asked you to pick the odd one out:

A. Star Trek original series
B. Star Trek TWOK
C. Star Trek TMP
D. Star Trek XI
E. TNG Season 1
F. TNG Season 2,

which one do you pick? Anybody can see that the style and vision of 'D' are much different. The humor was funny, but there was too much of it. At times it was like a light comedy movie. His Enterprise was needlessly changed, the villain had dubious motives - a miner blaming Spock for a disaster precipitated by natural phenomenon. If they wanted to make him like Khan, who had a legitimate grievance for SF not following up and was a crazy maniac to begin with, they failed. There was way too much action, the ship wasn't one of the main characters of the show, etc. you can just tell it's not the same. What themes were explored in the movie? I dont know to this day what complex-for-adults themes were faced in this move, it's sort of like Phantom Menace.
 
Oh, one would definitely pick out "E" and "F" as the most different on that list - totally different characters and a setting a century removed from "A," "B," "C," or "D."

;) :lol:

Unless, of course, one were ranking by entertainment value - then TMP would stand part as the least like Star Trek in general in that regard.
 
Whether he would have liked the money or not, I don't know, but I know that he wouldn't have liked the film.

No, you don't. You believe that he wouldn't have liked the film, but that belief is based on an interpretation you possess of his "vision" -- which you erroneously describe in static terms, as though he actually had the same "vision" throughout his career, when he clearly did not, as a casual glance at his scripts for TOS, TMP, and TNG will reveal.

Personally, I believe that the Gene Roddenberry who wrote TOS would have enjoyed ST09 and that the Gene Roddenberry behind TNG would have hated it. Personally, I think that the TOS Gene Roddenberry was a much better writer than the TNG Gene Roddenberry, so I'm not bothered by this.

It's easy to compare previous movies and shows, and STXI and see that it's different. If you took an IQ test, and the question asked you to pick the odd one out:

A. Star Trek original series
B. Star Trek TWOK
C. Star Trek TMP
D. Star Trek XI
E. TNG Season 1
F. TNG Season 2,

which one do you pick?
There are two possible answers:
1) E - because it's utterly, embarrasingly awful, while the other, although they have their flaws and cheesy moments, still have their merits.

or

2) C - because the others are entertaining, and don't contain endless space porn sequences.

Anybody can see that the style and vision of 'D' are much different. The humor was funny, but there was too much of it. At times it was like a light comedy movie.
Did you watch TOS lately? :rolleyes:
 
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