It could be through the eyes a rebel ship as well. The heroic Admiral Akbar and his valiant crew. The rebellion wasn't all scruffy nerf herders and wide eyed farmboys.First, Science Fiction is a form of Fantasy. With aliens instead of dwarfs, elves and trolls. Scientists instead of wizards. Science instead of magic. Vulcan is no more ''science'' than Tatooine or Mordor. Chris Pike rescuing Vina from the Talosians isn't all that different from Luke rescuing Leia from Darth Vader. Or Prince Charming freeing the Princess from the Evil Queen. Heck, in the Cage, Pike saves Vina (in full princess gear) from a Kaylar (Giant) in a castle. Kirk's done a few ''princess'' rescues as well. He's fought his fair share of ''dragons'', ''warlords'' and ''wizards'' too. And even a trickster or two. He goes on a ''journey'' every week and has mentors in the form of Spock and McCoy. And let's be honest, Spock and Vulcans in general are variation on the ''mysterious East'' trope.
Hmm, while I do see the parallels you draw, I think my suggestion is more that Star Wars as a mythology taps into a fantasy vein that allows it to have a larger cross-demographic appeal, like knights and sorcerers and magic kingdoms. Star Trek (at least as a base) attempts to appeal to a ''What If We Did This Stuff For Real?'' market, grounding itself in theoretical science and presenting it's adventures through the eyes of a buttons-and-bootstraps organization. A version of Star Wars where the audience identification figures were Grand Moff Tarkin and the Emperor, and where the prism of the rebellion was shown to us through the eyes of the officers aboard the Star Destroyer, would be a very different Star Wars indeed.
Star Trek is far more adult oriented with stories about moral choices and consequences.
"Adult oriented" became Zzzzzzzzzzzz...
Seriously, Star Trek was more fun and had more of a cultural presence when Kirk was battling Greek gods, lizard men, pizza burgers and bugle shaped planet destroyers. What came later, was self-important non-sense that began driving away the fans that made Trek a cultural phenomenon to begin with.
Abrams was absolutely correct when he said Star Trek needed more Star Wars in it.
Neither is Star Trek. Star Trek's biggest mess up was trying to explain how non-sensical technology works. It is called "techobabble" (named by the writers) for a reason.Star Wars is also not about science.
Star Trek (at least as a base) attempts to appeal to a ''What If We Did This Stuff For Real?'' market, grounding itself in theoretical science...
But that was abandoned long ago, from my perspective. Technobabble did little to ground the shows in theoretical science.
Star Trek became every bit as magic based as Star Wars, they just hid it behind technobabble.
...appeal to a much wider range of people than the startch-shirts-career-military types which Star Trek, basically, offers us as our identification figures.
You also have the fact that people, by and large, no longer trust the government and the military.
The Bottom Line: They're two very dissimilar takes on science fiction/fantasy, and fandom's seemingly constant need to compare and contrast them does neither franchise any favors.My advice is to enjoy each of them equally in turn for what they are, rather than for what they are not.
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THIS!
I get so sick of fanboyish "Star Trek is for thinkers" or "Star Wars kicks Star Trek's ass" mentalities.
I love both equally....merits, flaws, and everything in between.
Put it this way. Your average sports fan is going to be more attracted to admiring Leia and watching flashy sword battles than listening to a Picard speech on the importance of personal freedoms. Its just the way it is.
The Bottom Line: They're two very dissimilar takes on science fiction/fantasy, and fandom's seemingly constant need to compare and contrast them does neither franchise any favors.My advice is to enjoy each of them equally in turn for what they are, rather than for what they are not.
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THIS!
I get so sick of fanboyish "Star Trek is for thinkers" or "Star Wars kicks Star Trek's ass" mentalities.
I love both equally....merits, flaws, and everything in between.
I do not think it is simply fanboyish [or a direct attack on fans of Wars] and, to be honest, I think the sentiment is true.
Trek is at its absolute best when it talks. Yes we all enjoy a good action episode, Borg battling fleets and Dominion/Federation armadas preparing to engage...
But look at some of Trek's highest rated episodes. 'The Measure of a Man', 'The Inner Light', 'Far Beyond The Stars' etc...they are talkies. Star Trek is able to have an entire episode about a court room drama, the next is a poignant tale of a life lived.
Trek doesn't rely on fighters, masked 'clad in black' baddies, light based swords. This is not a criticism of 'Wars', it is simply an observation. Trek is slow, it moralises, it asks awkward questions and it can be quite preachy. Whereas Wars has explosions, conflict, a clearly defined Good vs. Evil dynamic and cool gadgets [be it fighters or sabers].
Put it this way. Your average sports fan is going to be more attracted to admiring Leia and watching flashy sword battles than listening to a Picard speech on the importance of personal freedoms. Its just the way it is.
Now this does not necessarily make one more worthy than the other. I think it simply emphasises that the fact they are based in space and have 'Star' in their titles really is the only thing they have in common. They are intended for two different audiences. An example of this that springs to mind is a [now finished] British TV sitcom called Coupling. [I love it] It features 6 twenty-somethings, three men and three women. Remind you of anything? But in execution it is nothing like Friends and intended for a different audience. [See: The Simpsons & Family Guy, Wii U & PS4]
Being TV shows with mobile "locations" is why. Both were designed that way.Agreed, Trek does have a certain flexibility. Off the top of my head, the one show even more flexible than Trek would be Dr. Who.
Star Wars is more of a fantasy movie that just happens to be set in the future.
Star Trek is supposed to be a more realistic depiction of the future and is straight sci-fi without any fantasy elements.
As far as the merchandise goes I always preferred the Playmates Star Trek figures of the 90's. The Star Wars figures I remember were too small and not very articulate.
They have advanced technology (spaceships, laser weapons, FTL travel) which I guess could be called futuristic, but that's a matter of perspective.Not sure what your points are. Seems like you're being contrary for the sake of it.
Star Wars may be set a long time ago in a galaxy far far away but it sure as heck looks like the future to me. Perhaps I should refer to it as futuristic but it clearly isn't meant to be set in any sort of identifiable past or present.
Tricorders, phasers and force fields are "magic wands". Spock's "spirit" possessed McCoy body until it could be placed in a "magically" grown duplicate of his own body via a "mystical" ceremony. Telepathy and telekinesis are regularly used in Star Trek and other Science Fiction properties and are also used in fantasy.The line is blurry.There may be those who see warp drive and humanoid aliens as fantasy elements but they're science fiction conceits. When Picard starts waving around a magical wand as a weapon and Kirk manages to communicate with him from the afterlife get back to me.
And the TARDIS seemed even more mobile, because it had great versatility regarding time, as well as space.Being TV shows with mobile "locations" is why. Both were designed that way.Agreed, Trek does have a certain flexibility. Off the top of my head, the one show even more flexible than Trek would be Dr. Who.
There may be those who see warp drive and humanoid aliens as fantasy elements but they're science fiction conceits. When Picard starts waving around a magical wand as a weapon and Kirk manages to communicate with him from the afterlife get back to me.
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