Okay. And just to admit everything, I loathe the nuTrek movies (other than one line, which was clever and sufficiently Spockian that I can easily imagine Nimoy saying it if it had ever been part of the dialogue of a TOS episode or movie).
Please share.
I’ll take action/adventure Trek over conference room / moralizing Trek any day. I’m one of those guys who shrugs at both “Measure of a Man” and “Duet”.![]()
*muttering to myself* IDIC, IDIC, IDIC, IDIC, IDIC, IDIC, IDIC...
The most obvious one is, if memory serves, "The Neutral Zone" - the one in which the three cryogenically frozen 20th century people were found, revived, and Picard threw a snit because of the inconvenience of Crusher having bothered to wake them and cure the ailments that had killed them. He figured they were already dead, so why bother using 24th-century medical knowledge to save them?
As @Timewalker notes "The Neutral Zone" is the primary offender with the rest just having an air of just being better than past humanity
Yeah, I always hated that, but just chalked it up to horrible writing. It didn't fit with Picards love of archeology, history, ancient literature and philosophy...
That said, with most* of Marvel's things I can follow the action. I had to revisit Infinity War/Endgame more times than I like to really get a sense of characters. But, honestly, just knowing characters like Captain America or Thor is helpful because they are anchor points for me to gravitate towards. I certainly cannot recommend all the MCU, but here is a favorite moment from Endgame:
I love it because I know the characters of Captain America and Thor ( I couldn't give aabout Thanos). Seeing Cap in action makes the whole thing worthwhile, and even when it turns in to a melee letter Cap is still that ground point.
It also pays off a quieter character moment from Age of Ultron, and makes use of Cap knowing how to use the hammer and shield together because of his very first meeting with Thor in the first Avengers movie.
Combat can reflect character. But the big issue with combat in most of the MCU (and modern action movies in general) is there really aren't any real stakes to combat. Infinity War set aside, heroic characters almost never lose (meaning get their asses beat but live to fight another day).
Super heroes winning their battles is hardly a new phenomenon...
I think anyone who doesn't find the scene with Sahil at the end of "That Hope Is You, Part I" inspirational is either a liar, has a very different definition of what "inspirational" means, or is not actually paying attention to what they're watching. Especially as they lower the Federation flag.
I'm no big Discovery fan, but I'll give you that one.
EDIT: Although, IIRC, there was a difference between how Americans reacted to that scene and how those from other countries reacted. So it might also be a regional thing.
I'm Canadian and I was into it. Then again, I consider the Federation flag far more mine than any real life countries flag...