:thumbsup Autocorrect.
As for why Starfleet would want to have a transporter like that classified it's simple. The whole crew beams to safety and then the transporter falls into enemy hands. Said transporter is then used to beam an army to any given planet.
Well. That pretty much nails it, actually. I hadn't thought of that, but it makes perfect sense.
That said, I hope the trans-warp-get-out-of-jail-free device is not used again. Let's not turn that into the new "time travel!" dodge.
Agreed and that whole post was eloquently put :thumbsup.
Orci's comments are still off putting though, it reminds me of other artists (whether it's a writer or director) who chooses to retaliate critics and criticism in general through the notion that, if you choose to criticize then you should do that creative job yourself.
I'm of two minds on writers being defensive and saying "Ok, hotshot, then YOU do it better."
On the one hand, I can sympathize with the emotional "Up yours!" response, particularly if it's something you worked hard on and are proud of, and then some whiny little spotty faced git comes along and craps all over it.
On the other hand, there's a way to get across a similar sentiment that doesn't just dismiss naysayers out of hand. I mean, yeah, SOME naysayers are just negative because it's different, but often times they have a point, or may have some "tweaks at the edges" that could've improved things. As a result, backlash can seem almost like you agree with them, but refuse to concede the point, and are all the more irked because you know they're right. Like, if you're a chef, trained at Le Cordon Bleu for years, then worked under great masters of the art in some of the finest restaurants in the world, you make a meal for someone, and they say something like "Eh, it was good, but I think it could've used shallots." And DAMMIT, they're RIGHT. And you KNOW in your heart of hearts that shallots WOULD have made the dish better....but instead you say "THEN GET THE HELL OUT OF MY RESTAURANT IF YOU DON'T LIKE IT, *******!!"
Better to shrug and say "I'm sorry you felt it was lacking. We did the best we could, but we'll really consider what you had to say for future endeavors." Then you have to actually mean it.
I understand your point, but they could have been equally different by creating new stories. Instead, they wrote in a plot device that eradicates the original timeline so that they wouldn't be held to duplicating it, then they proceeded to pick and choose elements from the original series and movies featuring the original series cast and include them in their "new" timeline. It's lazy, and it shows they didn't have the confidence to use that clean slate they created for themselves.
Two points:
1. They can SAY they eradicated the old timeline, but I don't care. I say it's an alternate universe, and I'll pick and choose the stuff
I like to acknowledge as canon.
2. I agree with the "Why'd you reboot it if you were just gonna do the same damn thing?!" argument. It's my common complaint about reboots and other branded properties. Much of the time, the brand is propping up the story, which itself is nothing spectacular. In this case, I found the story to be entertaining if derivative.
That said, for the record I found the two movies neither brilliant nor aggravating. I enjoyed them for what they were, but feel they could have been better if those responsible would have had the guts to make them truly separate from the original series.
Yep.
As for the other issue of "true" fandom and such, I think it's important to pay attention to the kind of language that geeks like us use to describe the objects of our fandom. It frequently falls into religious language. "Canon," for example, and what is or isn't "canonical" in a given series. I think the reason you see such vitriol from fans who deviate from what one fan perceives as the "true faith" is that there is so much that's bound up in the show/franchise/whatever, and it is so close to both fans' hearts that they take it VERY seriously. I think there's also the perception -- and I know I've fallen prey to it in the past -- that when a franchise changes directions, it is THOSE OTHER FANS who are at fault. If ALL the fans rejected the new direction, surely the "church" would return to its former glory, no? That's where, I think, a lot of the animosity towards "unbelievers" or "heretics" comes from.
It's only after you let go of a lot of that crap and just enjoy the stuff you enjoy and ignore the rest that it gets to a point where you can actually shrug off the disappointment of unsatisfying future entries.
Trek may have moved on. Trek may never, ever be what it was before. And that's ok because you've still got the old stuff.