FordSVT said:Don't deliberately insult the hard-core fans, but don't be a slave to them. The Star Trek club needs to give them a bit of leeway. As long as they don't directly contradict established continuity I think they'll be fine.
I think the overwhelming majority of folks here, or elsewhere for that matter, would agree with this sentiment.
I think that the reason that this article, and similarly-worded comments made on THIS board, rankle people (myself included) so much is that the way that the article, and those comments, are phrased seems to say something much different than what YOU just said.
There's a tendency to attempt to BELITTLE "everybody else" among certain elements of fandom. There's no doubt that the writer of this article considers himself (herself?) a fan. But he considers himself to be a "better, more balanced, more adult form of fan," it seems. He, "unlike the rest of us," is somehow more aware.
That's what rankled me. If the guy simply said that "The filmmakers must just try to make a good movie and not be beholden to the fans or the canon where these things are in conflict." If he'd said that... we'd all be happy enough.
But he was pretty clear that he felt that it's "the fans" (or rather, all the OTHER fans... not HIM obviously!) who are dragging things down. Which is just patent bull and is annoying without being remotely helpful.
We all know what's wrong with Trek-dom today. It's not that "the fans keep getting what they want." If that was the case, "the fans" would all be happy, and it would only be the REST of the audience that would be unhappy. Such, clearly, is not the case (a brief perusal of this board is enough to tell you that!).
The fans want what the general audience wants... good storytelling with compelling characters and believable situations. We simply have an ADDITIONAL, and not particularly contradictory, wish... to make it fit with what we already know.
This "fits with what we already know" bit is soooo often mischaracterized by the "I'm a better fan than you are" crowd. That's NOT to say, as they sometimes try to imply, that we think that the movie must acknowledge every hint of 40+ years of canon history. Just that the film must avoid unnecessarily CONTRADICTING any of that.
We live on just one tiny little planet. Yet in "real world" storytelling, nobody seem to have a problem with that. In the world of Star Trek, which is unbound by current reality AND is a much larger canvas anyway, we tend to assume that the entire world is defined by the little tiny bit we've seen on screen.
It's a BIG GALAXY. It's going to be easy to AVOID contradictions. All it takes is caring about what you're doing.
