Why Are We Accepting a Recast
All of those comments are... ahem... disputable at best. (I'm guessing you're a Kent State kiddie, aren'cha?)Sci said:Right now, the United States and the United Kingdom are embroiled in a quite-possibly illegal war that's killed thousands of our citizens and thousands more Iraqis. Al Qaeda and Osama bin Ladin are still at large. Vladimir Putin has moved the Russian Federation back to the old Soviet model of operation and damn near re-awakened the Cold War. There's a potential oil crisis, and environmental crisis. New Orleans hasn't been rebuilt yet and is still incredibly vulnerable to hurricanes. FEMA is a joke. The Attorney General is quite possibly a crook. And there's a presidential campaign going on.
Those are things that people ought to devote their energies to.
If Abrams was creating his own Trek movie, wouldn't it sound way more exciting?
Yes, God forbid anyone should remind us to put things in perspective. It's only a movie, after all. If it tanks, the world will not spin off its axis, the universe will not collapse, the economy will not crash, and the terrorists will not win. Life will go on, same as it did before.Cary L. Brown said:
The above-quoted pile of horseshit is completely off-topic, anyway, and thus appears to me to have been posted in an attempt to "troll"... that is, to steer the thread off-topic by throwing out inflammatory bull intended to stir up an argument, rather than to discuss the topic at hand.
cardinal biggles said:
Yes, God forbid anyone should remind us to put things in perspective. It's only a movie, after all. If it tanks, the world will not spin off its axis, the universe will not collapse, the economy will not crash, and the terrorists will not win. Life will go on, same as it did before.Cary L. Brown said:
The above-quoted pile of horseshit is completely off-topic, anyway, and thus appears to me to have been posted in an attempt to "troll"... that is, to steer the thread off-topic by throwing out inflammatory bull intended to stir up an argument, rather than to discuss the topic at hand.
cardinal biggles said:
People are taking the film too goddamn seriously, so I think any attempt to poke a hole in that overinflated balloon is a good thing.
Sci said:
"Why are we accepting a recast?" The OP makes it sound like Paramount somehow needs our permission, or as though it's the sort of thing that's worth getting upset over.
It's not.
Right now, the United States and the United Kingdom are embroiled in a quite-possibly illegal war that's killed thousands of our citizens and thousands more Iraqis. Al Qaeda and Osama bin Ladin are still at large. Vladimir Putin has moved the Russian Federation back to the old Soviet model of operation and damn near re-awakened the Cold War. There's a potential oil crisis, and environmental crisis. New Orleans hasn't been rebuilt yet and is still incredibly vulnerable to hurricanes. FEMA is a joke. The Attorney General is quite possibly a crook. And there's a presidential campaign going on.
Those are things that people ought to devote their energies to.
Not whether or not Paramount hires new and talented actors to play favorite old roles in a genuine attempt to breathe new life and energy into a beloved franchise and beloved characters.
9. “There are far more important things to worry about.” Pow! Knockout punch! The beauty of this argument is that it is irrefutably true. It’s like Maslow’s hierarchy of needs got together with the Kübler-Ross model of grief to create a leaderboard of tragedy and loss. Worried about how your kid is doing in school? Worry that your kid is on drugs! Saddened by Katrina? Think of the people who died in the Indian Ocean tsunami of 2004. Pull this argument out when people are discussing pop culture such as movies or comic books with any seriousness. Who cares that, carried to its logical conclusion, the argument means you should never worry about anything except the hypothetical #1 important worry of all time?
ancient said:
I'm reminded of #9 in the "How to argue badly in many easy steps" article.
9. “There are far more important things to worry about.” Pow! Knockout punch! The beauty of this argument is that it is irrefutably true. It’s like Maslow’s hierarchy of needs got together with the Kübler-Ross model of grief to create a leaderboard of tragedy and loss. Worried about how your kid is doing in school? Worry that your kid is on drugs! Saddened by Katrina? Think of the people who died in the Indian Ocean tsunami of 2004. Pull this argument out when people are discussing pop culture such as movies or comic books with any seriousness. Who cares that, carried to its logical conclusion, the argument means you should never worry about anything except the hypothetical #1 important worry of all time?
UWC Defiance said:
Frankly, the "Kent State Kiddy" jab killed whatever remaining respect I had for the poster. How old is he, anyway, and what does he know?
Okay... which the hell not? I'll answer your question... which, I'm sure, is something you weren't expecting. I mean, it's not like I wrote a short story that got turned into a really awful episode of TNG once or anything...UWC Defiance said:
Frankly, the "Kent State Kiddy" jab killed whatever remaining respect I had for the poster. How old is he, anyway, and what does he know?
RookieBatman said:
UWC Defiance said:
Frankly, the "Kent State Kiddy" jab killed whatever remaining respect I had for the poster. How old is he, anyway, and what does he know?
True, it was an ad hominem attack...
seigezunt said:
because the actors are really old now, and some of them are dead.
Dennis, Dennis, Dennis... do you HONESTLY think that Kent State is an EVENT?UWC Defiance said:Almost beside the point. People who think that what happened at Kent State is fodder for political insults are... well, they have an unfortunate misimpression.
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