Feel free to list and state your reasons
Our behavior is different. How often have you seen a headline like this?--TWO DIE ATTEMPTING RESCUE OF DROWNING CHILD. If a man gets lost in the mountains, hundreds will search and often two or three searchers are killed. But the next time somebody gets lost just as many volunteers turn out.The Search for Spock reverses that basic calculus. Instead of cold Vulcan logic, the human ability to go beyond logic and with notions of loyalty and dedication to do right by "family," even just the slight hope that your family might be given a peace through your sacrifice, is at the heart of the story. When Amanda confronts Spock with how this "illogical" decision is the only reason he still exists, I always love the hint of pride Amanda shows in how "illogical" humans can be in helping people.
When The Martian came out, I remember a few reviews of the movie (and the underlying story it's based on) criticized it on the basis that the movie doesn't address arguments about whether it's "worth it" to spend billions of dollars in resources and risk multiple more lives to save one man on Mars, especially in a world where people suffer and die because of inequality.Our behavior is different. How often have you seen a headline like this?--TWO DIE ATTEMPTING RESCUE OF DROWNING CHILD. If a man gets lost in the mountains, hundreds will search and often two or three searchers are killed. But the next time somebody gets lost just as many volunteers turn out.
Poor arithmetic, but very human. It runs through all our folklore, all human religions, all our literature--a racial conviction that when one human needs rescue, others should not count the price.”
When The Martian came out, I remember a few reviews of the movie (and the underlying story it's based on) criticized it on the basis that the movie doesn't address arguments about whether it's "worth it" to spend billions of dollars in resources and risk multiple more lives to save one man on Mars, especially in a world where people suffer and die because of inequality.
And the best response to those criticisms is that if you break things down to that sort of utilitarian logic, then why would we ever send firefighters into a burning building to save a baby? If we're just doing cold hard math about these things, their lives and the effect on their loved ones is not worth the risk.
To me (personal opinion), we send people in to that burning building because to be "human," in the fullest sense of the word, is that we can't (or at the very least "shouldn't") just stand there and do nothing because of bean-counter logic. To be human is to have empathy. At the heart of all evil in this world is selfishness. All "evil" is based on valuing your own pleasure and comfort over others, to the point that their suffering and loss doesn't matter. That's true whether it's murder, sexual assault, or robbery. And all expressions of love are expressed in sacrifice and empathy. There's no greater expression of caring about someone than to find a way to understand their problems, and care so much that you're willing to make sacrifices to help.
I actually completely agree that The Wrath of Khan is the bedrock the rest of the films followed forever after — I just think that’s been a problem, because they were never going to do it better than TWOK, and to this day they’re still trying.TWoK. Its character dynamic is the bedrock upon which all cinematic Star Trek is founded thereafter. Each film franchise has its own style & vibe, but all of the following movies owe their DNA to that movie, even more than TMP (which is also a good standalone, but very different)
TWoK was a do-over. It course corrected the IP, & that redirection connected with audiences in such a way that cemented the franchise to survive decades more & was aspirational to every subsequent film.
Most reviews of it, at the time, were along the lines of "THIS is the Star Trek we wanted". TMP was by no means a box office failure, but it did not generate the audience reaction that TWOK did, much of which was due to the fresh take on the character relationships, their bonds, & the drama that tied them, which drove the stories
This stood in stark contrast to not only the more premise or concept driven original film, but the original series as well, and that dynamic has been the heart of the franchise ever since IMHO.
No argument there. All good points.I actually completely agree that The Wrath of Khan is the bedrock the rest of the films followed forever after — I just think that’s been a problem, because they were never going to do it better than TWOK, and to this day they’re still trying.
EDIT: Although they weren’t made as such, to me the great Star Trek film trilogy isn’t TWOK/TSFS/TVH, it’s TMP/TWOK/TSFS. Aside from being the earliest and freshest, those three together fully define the “Big Friendship” arc of TOS, and each brings the series someplace it’s never been before. After that the films remain fun, but feel more formulaic and usually less “important”. 1-2-3 is an epic saga (just as 2-3-4 is meant to be).
While I like TMP and its approach to the characters better than you do, I agree with you 100% about both the grandeur of the first three, and the disappointment about TVH (though everybody else seemed to love it). I’m more accepting of it all these years later, but I felt and basically still feel that when you clearly are making a connected trilogy, and your first two chapters are gigantic sturm und drang space opera, your grand finish ought not to be a jokey romp through San Francisco. But hey.No argument there. All good points.
It would be easy to be jaded about TWoK, for the fact that they've all been trying to live up to it since, with varying degrees of success, but I can't hold it against that movie for being good enough to set the standard.
I definitely can understand the notion to herald the first 3 as the defining trilogy. Despite it being a fun romp, I do recall being slightly disappointed with TVH, because it, & the 2 after, really didn't seem to be as epic as the others had been (though 6 certainly tries)
What the first 3 do well is to convey a grandeur befitting the graduation of the world of Star Trek from the small screen to the big screen.
Where TMP falls just short for me is in its repurposing of the Phase II script, that's original point was to be the intro for a new Star Trek (one that was a lot more like what TNG would become) As such, it's not specifically crafted for the TOS characters per say. It had to be reworked for them, & it's too dry for them IMHO.
It's the cerebral or more formal style & dynamic that would become TNG's Hallmark. Thank God the TOS actors knew their characters so well that they gave the audience portrayals which kept the film on track, because the production certainly didn't present them that way (like they'd later do in TWoK & thereafter)
At times, I'd wondered where all the personality of our characters had gone. It hadn't been written in, & was left to the actors to cook it in, despite that fact. The movie wasn't about them in any way, & it needed to be, in some degree IMHO
I don't think had a clear idea. They made each movie as it came.While I like TMP and its approach to the characters better than you do, I agree with you 100% about both the grandeur of the first three, and the disappointment about TVH (though everybody else seemed to love it). I’m more accepting of it all these years later, but I felt and basically still feel that when you clearly are making a connected trilogy, and your first two chapters are gigantic sturm und drang space opera, your grand finish ought not to be a jokey romp through San Francisco. But hey.
That’s certainly true from The Final Frontier onward. I’ve always wished they could go back to that early feeling where each one was an event that left Star Trek in a different place, and you eagerly waited for the next couple of years to find out what happened next, but I guess the advent of TV Trek running concurrently made that impractical — especially once the TNG movies started happening side-by-side with DS9 and VOY. They could have tried something like that with the Kelvinverse movies, but they didn’t.I don't think had a clear idea. They made each movie as it came.
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