I SEE SPIDEY
Eternal
- Joined
- Sep 2, 2003
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- 31
A two week push is no big deal.
They are making you choose between Star Trek and Jax Sawyer.Yeah, when I saw that it was being pushed back, my first thought was "Oh f***", but then I saw that it was just two weeks and was greatly relieved.

There is allegory in the new movies....Star Trek Into Darkness is an allegory on the war on terror
Not really.
Real persuasive and convincing answer there, Roach.
Homefront, In the Pale Moonlight, and the first 2 and a half seasons of BSG all did a far better job of examining the moral questions faced by liberal democracies threatened by extremist threats. The former show the heroes of the story being seduced by and sometimes accepting wrongful, expendient methods to serve a preceived greater good. In doing so, they make us question our assumptions about the correctness of those methods. STID simply provides a caricature of such a dilemma with moustache twirling Admiral Marcus. It just browbeats us over the head about the correctness of the heroes and the wrongness of section 31.
There's allegory but unfortunately its for Orci's nonsense falseflag conspiracy theories that somehow also managed to rehash The Undiscovered Country.
Real persuasive and convincing answer there, Roach.
Homefront, In the Pale Moonlight, and the first 2 and a half seasons of BSG all did a far better job of examining the moral questions faced by liberal democracies threatened by extremist threats. The former show the heroes of the story being seduced by and sometimes accepting wrongful, expendient methods to serve a preceived greater good. In doing so, they make us question our assumptions about the correctness of those methods. STID simply provides a caricature of such a dilemma with moustache twirling Admiral Marcus. It just browbeats us over the head about the correctness of the heroes and the wrongness of section 31.
All that happens but it doesn't mean that its a good or nuanced allegory. It's hackneyed falseflag conspriacy nut crap.
Marcus is the 9/11 truther villain, the government/military insider pulling the strings on terrorist attatcks in order to justify beefing up the military. And the whole 72 virgins/augments is exactly the kind of on the nose hack writing we're groaning about.

ermIdris Elba said:I think Star Trek has prided themselves as being quite classic when it comes to villains, like ’he’s a guy who wants to end the world,’ there’s no doubt about that.
erm
no, there's doubt about that. the villains so far
- wanted to meet their creator
- wanted revenge on Kirk
- wanted access to a WMD
- wanted to make contact with whales
- wanted a space ship (for whatever reason, we never learn why)
- wanted to sabotage a peace treaty
- wanted back into the Nexus
- wanted to change history and/or to assimilate the Earth
- wanted revenge on their forefathers that cast them out and/or eternal youth
- wanted... something about Picard, destroying the Earth, revenge on Romulans, a cure for their illness, sleep with Troi...it was confusing, really
- wanted revenge on Spock
- wanted open war with the Klingons/their crew and ship back
I don't think any of them wanted to 'End the world'
- V'Ger was not activly trying, it just happendWell, let's see--
- Wanted to meet the creator and was destroying the world in the process.
- Wanted revenge on Kirk and I think (been a long time since I've seen it) was going to use the Genesis device to destroy worlds.
- Wanted a WMD... to destroy worlds.
- Wanted to make contact with whales and was destroying the world in the process.
- Yup, he wanted to meet God.
- Yup, sabotage a peace treaty.
- Wanted back into the Nexus and was destroying worlds/systems in the process.
- Changing history/assimilating the human race is very much a form of destroying the world.
- Displacing/then wiping out a (small) civilization could be considered "destroying the world", but yeah, mostly they just wanted eternal youth and to sick it to their ancestors.
- Revenge on Picard/Romulus etc... all with the end goal of destroying the world.
- Revenge on Spock... by destroying one world then trying to destroy a second.
- Yup, wanted to propagate war. Although, they were going to fire 72 WMD's at the Klingon homeworld...
So in fact, they pretty much all were trying to destroy worlds, just for myriad reasons.
- V'Ger was not activly trying, it just happend
- I still think Khan mostly wanted revenge. and maybe conquering the world afterwards. but destroying? the best WMD is one you don't have to use.
- the Klingons back then were still a cold war analogy. they wanted Genesis to be step ahead in the arms race.
- again, the probe didn't try to destroy the world. like V'Ger that was not a motive but something that happend.
- maybe 'Gods' motive was destroying the world, we will never find out.
- sabotaging a peace treaty
- destroyed mostly uninhabitated planets, but again, the havoc was not the motive
- assimilating the world, yes. ending it? no
- destroying a small society, but the world?
- whatever Shinzons motives were, I doubt he himself knew
- destroying one or two planets to take revenge. but end the world?
- open war and destruction of a planet as a means to it, not exactly world ending

UC was about the fall of the soviet union...STID was the war on terror