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*sigh* The article is still highly inaccurate....the newer shows were at the top of their game production wise--award winners even--not "cheesy" they still seem out of touch with modern trek.
*sigh* The article is still highly inaccurate....the newer shows were at the top of their game production wise--award winners even--not "cheesy" they still seem out of touch with modern trek.
That's not a matter of inaccuracy. It's a difference of opinion.
I like just about all "Star Trek," some of it more than other parts. That said, what they're doing here is at base what I hoped would happen after the last "Star Trek" TV series folded: they're returning to the core material that first defined Trek and casting off most of what came later.
Everything after the original television series is one lengthy elaboration of the original - and it's done. It petered out.
Abrams and Paramount are introducing a new version based directly on TOS. Not that they'll probably intentionally trip over any of the post-TOS continuity - they've evidently incorporated those parts of it that they can use in this story, and most deviations will most likely be both trivial and accidental (though not trivial enough to avoid much wailing and gnashing of teeth among hard core fans) - but it's just not important to what they're doing.
Needless to say, if the new "Star Trek" is a success then future productions will use it as their main touchstone and the whole Franchise will evolve off in an increasingly divergent way from pre-Abrams Trek.
*sigh* The article is still highly inaccurate....the newer shows were at the top of their game production wise--award winners even--not "cheesy" they still seem out of touch with modern trek.
That's not a matter of inaccuracy. It's a difference of opinion.
I like just about all "Star Trek," some of it more than other parts. That said, what they're doing here is at base what I hoped would happen after the last "Star Trek" TV series folded: they're returning to the core material that first defined Trek and casting off most of what came later.
Everything after the original television series is one lengthy elaboration of the original - and it's done. It petered out.
Abrams and Paramount are introducing a new version based directly on TOS. Not that they'll probably intentionally trip over any of the post-TOS continuity - they've evidently incorporated those parts of it that they can use in this story, and most deviations will most likely be both trivial and accidental (though not trivial enough to avoid much wailing and gnashing of teeth among hard core fans) - but it's just not important to what they're doing.
Needless to say, if the new "Star Trek" is a success then future productions will use it as their main touchstone and the whole Franchise will evolve off in an increasingly divergent way from pre-Abrams Trek.
Its not opinion, it shows a complete lack of knowledge.
The opening sequence, for example, is an emotionally wrenching passage that culminates with a mythic climax sure to leave zealots howling ''Heresy!'' But revisionism anxiety is the point. ''The movie,'' Lindelof says, ''is about the act of changing what you know.''
Its not opinion, it shows a complete lack of knowledge. Modern Trek's numerous award wins and nominations for its technical merit within the industry demonstrate they have a better understanding than the journalist who worte the article.
RAMA
Its not opinion, it shows a complete lack of knowledge. Modern Trek's numerous award wins and nominations for its technical merit within the industry demonstrate they have a better understanding than the journalist who worte the article.
RAMA
Technical awards aside, the author is still free to consider the shows to be "cheesy looking" if he/she wants to. That's a purely subjective matter. In any case, the only "cheese" reference I could find in the article was a reference to Trek as a whole becoming (in the writer's opinion) "retro Sci-Fi cheese". That refers to the author's view of the state of the franchise, IMO, not specifically to production values of the later series. Or were you thinking of a different passage?
rabid fandom (they're called Trekkers, please, not Trekkies)
It's very sad that we live in a world where this quote is a good sign. It really hurts me that for Trek to be successful it has to be handed to a crew that can't take its canon & setting seriously. I know I'm being silly but hearing stuff like this really hurts; even for a guy who isn't a hardcore uniform-toting Trekkie.''There were days when I would look around the set, with all these tattooed faces and pointy ears, bizarre weaponry and Romulan linguists, with dialogue about 'Neutral Zones' and 'Starfleet' — and I would start sweating,'' he says. ''But I knew this would work, because the script Alex and Bob wrote was so emotional and so relatable. I didn't love Kirk and Spock when I began this journey — but I love them now.''
That ethos may seem cornball to an America darkened by a decade's worth of catastrophe, but after an election season that has seen both presidential nominees run on ''hope'' and ''change,'' Star Trek just may find itself on the leading wave of a zeitgeist shift — away from bleak, brooding blockbusters and toward the light. ''In a world where a movie as incredibly produced as The Dark Knight is raking in gazillions of dollars, Star Trek stands in stark contrast,'' Abrams says. ''It was important to me that optimism be cool again.'
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