I think they're saying here that the criticism was for the new Trek movie, 
which didn't tackle really heavy issues. The acknowledgement is that the 
original series did that very well. But the author of the article seems to be a 
bit worried that the writers would handle it clumsily (a worry I share), and 
also that doing so would simply make it too heavy (which I disagree with 
strongly). 


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Adrianne Brennan" <adrianne.bren...@gmail.com> 
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Thursday, September 24, 2009 1:14:06 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern 
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] J.J. Abrams Says 'Star Trek' Will Boldly Go  
Allegorical 

  




Teh whut? 


Whoever wrote this wasn't very familiar with the original series and never 
watched eps such as "Let That Be Your Last Battlefield" or the whole Federation 
vs the Klingons. ST has NEVER shied away from political and/or social 
commentary and messages of the modern day. 


Ugh. 

~ "Where love and magic meet" ~ 
http://www.adriannebrennan.com 
Experience the magic of Blood of the Dark Moon:   
http://www.adriannebrennan.com/botdm.html 
Take a bite out of Blood and Mint Chocolates: 
http://www.adriannebrennan.com/bamc.html 
Dare to take The Oath in this erotic fantasy series: 
http://www.adriannebrennan.com/books.html#the_oath 



On Sat, Sep 19, 2009 at 11:24 PM, Tracey de Morsella < 
tdli...@multiculturaladvantage.com > wrote: 








by Elisabeth Rappe Sep 17th 2009 // 10:02AM 

http://www.cinematical.com/category/ 
http://www.cinematical.com/2009/09/17/j-j-abrams-says-star-trek-will-boldly-go-allegorical/
 rumormonger/ 



Whenever J.J. Abrams , Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman are pinned down, the talk 
inevitabley turns to the Star Trek sequel. They're only just beginning to toss 
around story ideas, but Hero Complex managed to pry a little more news out of 
Abrams & Crew, who hinted that Trek might start tackling contemporary issues. 

"In many ways a sequel will have a very different mission. It needs to do what 
[Gene] Roddenberry did so well, which is allegory," says Abrams. "It needs to 
tell a story that has connection to what is familiar and what is relevant. It 
also needs to tell it in a spectacular way that hides the machinery and in a 
primarily entertaining and hopefully moving story. There needs to be relevance, 
yes, and that doesn't mean it should be pretentious." 

Orci echoed Abrams, noting that it had been one of the biggest criticisms of 
the new Trek. "One of the things we heard was, 'Make sure the next one deals 
with modern-day issues.' We're trying to keep it as up-to-date and as 
reflective of what's going on today as possible. So that's one thing, to make 
it reflect the things that we are all dealing with today." When asked if 
"modern day issues" meant war, terrorism, and torture, Orci agreed that was "an 
approach" they were taking. 

Continued below the jump 


The quotes have caused quite a discussion in the movie news-o-sphere to a mixed 
response. Many feel that the films should reflect the original 1960s series and 
hint at social issues. Others feel that such blatant allegory can make a film 
feel very dated in a few short years, and want Trek to just stick to telling 
good adventure stories. After all, taking a political stance stands to alienate 
many moviegoers, though controversy is always welcome from a publicity point of 
view. 

Star Trek is definitely heading into problematic waters. Sci-fi has always been 
at its best when it reflected the modern world, but it is such a fine line to 
tread because you don't want your sci-fi epic to be full of thinly disguised 
Communists when the geopolitical climate changes. While I think issues of 
pre-emptive strikes, war, and torture might be general enough to be forever 
relevant, I worry that trying to tackle them will just be clumsy. It already 
feels dated in some ways, and it's difficult to imagine Starfleet saying 
anything new on the subject. If Star Trek is going to tackle something I hope 
they go gentle, and tackle prejudice through Spock and Uhura's relationship. 
There's some racial and gender issues there just waiting to be mined for a 
background story. 

Tracey de Morsella, Managing Producer 

The Green Economy Post 

http://greeneconomypost.com 

tra...@greeneconomypost.com 








Reply via email to