Nah, man. The problem is I grew up and started using critical thinking. I know that's the biggest crime to some people, enough to yell that the government should invade universities to rip apart it curriculum.
Dont worry. I dont think that highly of Star Wars either. Or Ghostbusters. Goonies isnt great. Baulders Gate 1 does not hold up but 2 sort does. Aliens was still pretty good. I also have never given a 10/10 for a game or movie. No movie has ever been that good. Nor have I given 1. Favourite show is Babylon 5 but am very willing to point out its flaws.
Because I think nostalgia is the stupidest thing. It makes you pretend how good a piece of media should be, rather than actually. Closely followed by the either love or hate mentality with no nuance. As I doing with TNG now, I revisit properties that I dont like as much as other to see if Im being prejudiced. Turns out I was but...I found a bunch of other problems. I care about being accurate rather than holding into old assumptions
But, you know, if you want to lump me in this group of people. Sure, go ahead
Edit: I also do care for any of this 'gotta follow what the general consensus' crap that most fandoms have. People keep saying that TNG is the best Star Trek. I cant even place it above Voyager. And Im not really going to change my mind because that's what the majority thinks
You know the idea of critical thinking is an academic concept of self critical analysis of ones own work and the conclusions you believe you have come to with the aim of determining potential other explanations and trying to rule them out right?
It's not actually "Be very critical of the things you watch and see and nit pick all the time and criticise the world and everything in it" as certain pop culture pundits keep presenting it.
In terms of this it's important to view Star Trek TOS as a product of it's own time are there flaws? Yes. the important thing is to try and understand if the flaw is due to it's time or due an actual issue.
E.G. I could heavily criticise Babylon 5 for it's pretty awful CGI. However that wouldn't be much of a fair criticism as in it's time it was good and judging it against the standards of today, of course it won't look as good. There's a certain degree of almost acceptance of some issues you have to accept when viewing older shows.
Also I thought DS9 was now regarded as the best star Trek show?
Humanoid? Fine. Identical to humans? I find that harder to swallow.
Well they weren't always that close to human. I mean the Gorn exists in Star Trek.
It's more to do with the potential processing power so beyond a certain number of limbs the creature would spend more brain power trying to control it's limbs than anything else.
Star Trek's not the only sci-fi show with this problem, but from the real-world perspective, it's far away from "hard" sci-fi. And from a narrative standpoint, other series have managed to get around the issue better than Star Trek has.
That seems to be more a discussion of narrative rather than a discussion of scientific accuracy. But even then, two of the three Kelvinverse films (Into Darkness, Beyond) deal with themes that feel appropriate to the IP. Maybe a bit more action-orientated, but that same criticism was applied to Wrath of Khan. Yeah, The Motion Picture tries to be more cerebral, but I've never seen anyone who considers it to be superior to WoK.
Oh Into Darkness was really one of the "Wagon Trail to the Stars" style things. It highlight a lot of the issues people have.
Khan in the Kelvinverse means nothing before then. They had to have old Spock basically big him up as a villain. There's also all the section 31 stuff which is really is a weird thing that keeps being something people want to bring up and make far more of a thing in modern Trek because they can then do fairly stock "Shady government agency" stories.
Beyond feels like the most Star Trek because there is some attempts at negotiation and more about coming together and working together. Into Darkness is a Wild West film but with a Star Trek skin in it. That doesn't mean you can't enjoy it. I did but I very much had to stop seeing it as a Star Trek film.
Hell I only got through Picard by pretending it was a sequel to Gene Roddenberry's other show
Andromeda
That was fantastic. Thanks for sharing.
I think this guy's observations can be fun:
I understand these new sequels and spinoffs are meant to be divisive. Why would anyone want that? If they weren't divisive, couldn't they be, er, unifying and make more money?
There's a lot of reasons for that potentially.
1) Cleaning out the nerds - I hate to say it but there's still some level of "Ew the nerds like this" so there's an attempt to push to more towards what is seen as the standard of the genre. Star Trek stood out in the genre because it showed a hopeful future where everyone had come together and a lot of petty issues no longer mattered. Also only it and Babylon 5 were shows more looking at ideologies and ideas. If the Nerds hate it and the narrative is the evil basement dwelling woman hating nerds who are everything wrong with the world then the show must be good and "progressive" or whatever.
2) The people writing it not being good at it or not actually caring. Some of the writers do care. Bits in Picard showed some-one cared a lot or cared enough to research a lot of stuff. The problem is it feels like some others involved don't care and are just used to writing standard Sci-Fi. It's like Paul Feig where he claimed to be a big fan of Ghostbusters but after Answer the Call came out and didn't make the numbers he admitted he wasn't really into Ghostbusters that much.
3) Wanting to leave an impact. This is one I bring up because it feels like a bad trend in media. People can't seemingly just relax and hope the audience enjoys the work, they're given big names to play with and they want to be remembered and leave their mark. Problem is to leave a good mark takes a lot of effort and skill, more so with well established properties that were built up by skilled people who worked hard. So my suspicion is some writers try to do good and then when they don't get audiences applauding them they get angry and decide if they can't be loved then they'll be remembered by being hated by the fanbase and try to radically shape things up in a way that will damage parts of the show. E.G. Series 12 of Doctor Who (the 2nd series with Jody Whitaker as The Doctor).
4) Politics and thinking they're smart or playing to lets say less than media literate critics. Some people choose to use the big name shows as a platform to snipe at their perceived political opponents. Some do it because they believe it's their duty to. Some do it because now they have control of the old guard and they want to destroy the past. Some do it because some critics don't seem to get political messaging unless it's about very present [current year] events and ideas and causes and will emphatically support and insult those who don't support shows that push certain idea. Don't believe me people might write like this? Watch the Series The Magicians which I do enjoy but it certainly takes it's shots at a lot of political targets.
Jason Bourne cause so much problems for action films. For a good while, most of the 2010, action films had to spruce up the jitter, shaky cam, or quick cuts and call it realistic or realism. while the Bourne series is not the worst of this, except for that feel that sample of force film that brought back Matt Damon. It cost a huge amount of problems. The fact that Bourne's action sequences are not looked at fondly says something. And believe it or not I actually prefer the first film over the other sequels. Because the action was basic and you could see what was going on. The sequels took themselves too seriously. This is more so the second film though. The third film brought a bit more humor back and I do appreciate that. Legacy should have been its own film, and the less said about the fourth official movie the better.
Bourne brought in what I call the Grimdark era for spy stuff. You could argue xXx primed the waters for it by Bourne was when Grimdark really hit the spy fiction stuff.Every-one wanted to copy it one way or another and even James Bond the cheesy spy series went in that direction.
I mean I'm kinda happy Kingsman kind of brought back the silly somewhat over the top gadgets and the screw realism angle more.