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I'm 32, so damn old and don't want to see ST 11 and 12.
The second one (Into Darkness) had some things to say in regard to the geopolitical scene of the last couple decades. But I think that we are just so used to such themes now that we tend not to notice them anymore.
I've heard it said that Star Trek works better thematically on television than in motion pictures. I would tend to agree, as the movies have been geared more toward spectacle. I find the original series to be much more thoughtful and nuanced than The Wrath of Khan, for example, even though that film is pretty much a universal fan favorite.
I'm 32, so damn old and don't want to see ST 11 and 12.
I've only seen the first two of the new movies (I'll see the third, just don't care that much, so it will happen when it happens) and thought the first one was okay, but by the second one, it had become a generic action adventure movie (you could see the marketing behind "the franchise value") that had none of the heart, none of the philosophy and none of the social perspective that the original series had.
Yes, the original TV series was (I agree with you) "swashbuckling, fun and high adventure," but it also had a philosophy, a social commentary and view of man's place in the universe that made it intellectually special, but by the second one of the new movies, I felt all that was gone and it was just like every other big-budget, mindless, cookie-cutter action movie.
Just one thing:
"The measure of a man".
!!
Riker and a Klingon woman . . .? Can't say I recall that! He did serve as exec on a Klingon ship in an exchange program, and handled the hazing and potential hazards of officer status on a ship where it's perfectly all right for your underling to try to kill you. There were a couple of female officers aboard. One male Klingon asks if Riker can handle a Klingon woman. Riker looks him in the eye and says, "Both of them?"Say it loud, say it proud: I'm a "Next Generation" fan.
Jean-Luc Picard has the gravitas required of a Star Fleet captain.
In the original series, Spock should have been the Captain and Kirk should have been his lovable but problematic first lieutenant who was always causing trouble.
In the Next Generation, the plots were often thoughtful. In that sense, it was true to the original Star Trek which could also be a little moralizing at times (Remember the episode with the two guys fighting who were each half black and half white, but on opposite sides of their bodies? Sheesh. Hit me with a baseball bat, why don't ya?) That earnestness --or smug preachiness, if you prefer-- is part of the Star Trek tradition. I regret that the newest movie venture has decided that the best way to sell tickets is to vacuum out any and all thoughtfulness. Bigger explosions do not make bigger movies. Anyway, in Next Generation, Data was a good Spock substitute, always asking us to explore the human condition in an often funny way. Will Riker was, in a way, the Kirk stand-in; an ambitious officer with a big libido (I seem to recall that Riker once had a fling with a female Klingon officer and lived to love again.) . . .
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Riker and a Klingon woman . . .? Can't say I recall that! He did serve as exec on a Klingon ship in an exchange program, and handled the hazing and potential hazards of officer status on a ship where it's perfectly all right for your underling to try to kill you.
Yes; a complex and startling story. The alteration in the appearance of the Enterprise D and its crew at the moment of the initial change -- darker, more military-looking uniforms, a dimmer bridge with a more "wartime" regimen, et al. -- is disturbing.One of my favorite, if not favorite, TNG episodes is 'Yesterday's Enterprise.'
The basic premise is that current reality changes when an Enterprise from the past ('C') emerges from a rift. The ship was supposedly destroyed in a battle in its time and is badly damaged.
The moral play is what to do with the ship and its remaining crew. Allow them to stay in the present and remain safe, or send them back to certain death. The other side of the see-saw here is that, through its actions in that battle, the Enterprise C was indirectly responsible for peace between the Federation and the Klingons, whom they were helping to defend against a Romulan attack.
Since reality had been changed, Tasha Yar is still chief of security, and Worf is not there, as the Federation and the Klingons are mortal enemies. Yar and the acting Captain of the 'C' form a bond, and she decides to go back into the rift with the ship, in part because Guinan tells her this reality is not right, she is not supposed to be here because she dies a meaningless death in the other (regular series) timeline. Yar decides that she would rather die a meaningful death, so she goes back to the past with the 'C'. All this occurs under threat of, and then attack by Klingon ships.
The instant it goes back, all returns to normal, and no one is aware that anything out of the ordinary has happened, except Guinan, who has a feeling about it, and wants to know more about Yar, whom she has never met.