• Nate Cox
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    11 months ago

    I enjoy the Tarantino films, but I don’t want them anywhere near Star Trek.

    I really dislike what’s happening with ST lately; what was in my childhood a hopeful message for how much humanity could achieve when we finally get our shit together, is now just another action movie / drama template. Government bad, corruption everywhere, war for the sake of war, etc.

    I’m certain Tarantino would double down on that and I just don’t want it.

    • Ramin Honary@lemmy.ml
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      11 months ago

      Government bad, corruption everywhere, war for the sake of war, etc.

      I’m certain Tarantino would double down on that and I just don’t want it.

      Tarantino is kind of a bellwether for the mostly apolitical right-wing (but non-fascist) middle-class majority of the US population, the movie “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” convinced me of that. It also convinced me that Tarantino himself has lost the plot, or actually never really had it. He reminds me a bit of Beavis and Butthead, kind of just watching movies and TV all the time, sorting everything into the binary categories “cool” or “sucks”, except he actually goes out and makes films that glorify all he thinks is “cool” which happens to be a cross-section of all media that glorifies violence and toxic masculinity.

      So he likes Star Trek. Congratulations Tarantino, your “geek” bona-fides are authentic, but like the rest of the right-wing (non-fascist) middle-class majority, you really have no fucking clue and don’t care about the political origins of Star Trek and are just itching to erase them so you can make it into another “cool” movie that glorifies violence and toxic masculinity. You can fuck right off, Tarantino.

      • DessertStorms@kbin.social
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        11 months ago

        right-wing (but non-fascist)

        you keep using these words but they don’t mean what you think they mean… People who are right wing support fascism. Full stop. They don’t have to mean to, but they actively do, and what I assume is an attempt to spare their feelings (though the reason doesn’t really matter) is just more confirmation for their cognitive dissonance that they’re not doing anything wrong.

        I very much agree with everything else you said, but I can’t grasp why you would make the extra effort to pander to them like that, it’s bizarre.

        • SupraMario@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          You do realize that’s like saying all people who are left wing support authoritarian communism right? Neither extreme is healthy.

        • Ramin Honary@lemmy.ml
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          11 months ago

          People who are right wing support fascism. Full stop.

          I very much agree with everything else you said, but I can’t grasp why you would make the extra effort to pander to them like that, it’s bizarre.

          You are right, and I also agree with you, so let me just clarify… there is a difference between people who unconsciously support fascism merely because they are apolitical, and people who are very deliberately fascist, as in enthusiastic supporters of the Republican party.

          Most fans of US movies are indifferent, and do not think of themselves as political beings. They think of themselves as just “ordinary.” Like a fish not knowing what water is, “ordinary” for an average US citizen is about as close to fascism as a person can possibly be without enthusiastically actively waving around swastikas – but there is still a difference between “ordinary” apolitical people like Tarantino and all of his fans who think of him as edgy, and someone actively wishing to purge the world of all non-white people. That is what I mean by “right wing” and not fascist.

          I think it is important to draw that distinction because I don’t like blaming apolitical people for being the victims of US mainstream cinema brainwashing.

          • DessertStorms@kbin.social
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            11 months ago

            Ok, so you’re not talking about right wing people then (or more accurately - conservatives), you’re talking about centrists and liberals (who are not left wing) (edit to add: while claiming to be “apolitical”, looks like Tarantino has donated to the DNC in the past, so that tracks).

            I know that’s uncomfortable to hear, but it’s the truth, and to those willing to sit with that discomfort and challenge their bias, I recommend taking the time to read this and this.

            • acockworkorange@mander.xyz
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              11 months ago

              Show me a moderate Democrat in the US and I’ll show you a moderate right winger in the world. From a world perspective, the US hasn’t had a left leaning president in the last 30 years or more. The US lost its left at some point, and advocating for sensible policies became its new left. Outside looking in, Bernie is a centrist or at most left-of-center.

              So if your reference is the full spectrum, the majority of the US population is right wing, a good portion of it radicalized fascists. Now if your reference is the severely skewed Overton window of the US, then yeah, all right wingers are fascists.

            • GregorGizeh@lemmy.zip
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              11 months ago

              Just a side note: American fucked up definitions of words and ideologies are not “how things are called”. Liberals are not non committed leftists.

            • Ramin Honary@lemmy.ml
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              11 months ago

              you’re talking about centrists and liberals.

              I suppose I am, though I think it is accurate to call centrists and liberals “right wing.”

              Those are both good articles, I have actually read them both before.

              • DessertStorms@kbin.social
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                11 months ago

                I think it is accurate to call centrists and liberals “right wing.”

                Oh yeah, I agree in principle, but practically it becomes a bit confusing, as this exchange has demonstrated lol, glad we cleared it up…

                And yeah, fuck Tarantino.

      • Kyre@kbin.social
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        11 months ago

        Also Lower Decks is incredible. A Star Trek show that makes fun of itself and the franchise but is still narratively driven and… entertaining.

        • Ð Greıt Þu̇mpkin@lemm.ee
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          11 months ago

          I call it the Omniman/Homelander distinction

          That is to say, is the deconstructing work made by someone who gets the message of the work being deconstructed or not.

          Omniman is a complex look at the stated origin of Superman being sent to earth, and the paternalistic nature of what exactly Jor’El wished for Clark to do with the benefits of Earth’s environment, and also a look at how even despite that, Superman would have been capable of learning to be a true hero without that guiding hand of a human upbringing, and that some of his spark isn’t nature or nurture but just that drop of empathy it takes to make someone see helping others as worth it for its own sake.

          Homelander is a wankfest about how bad superhero comics are written by a guy who wrote an entire series about how he believes everyone secretly wants to be a murder rapist and is just “brainwashed by societal bullshit” to not acknowledge it.

        • Elise@beehaw.org
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          11 months ago

          I’ll check it out thanks. I kinda disliked the idea of a st cartoon and it seems more aimed at teenagers.

      • Nate Cox
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        11 months ago

        I kinda feel like I just don’t have the heart for ST anymore. Picard was the final nail in the coffin, I am all out of trust for the modern generation of writers.

        I’ll just watch TNG through every couple of years and be happy in my bubble.

    • FuryMaker@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Yeah, I prefer the positive role models & society present in 90’s trek. You don’t get that much in nutrek.

    • acockworkorange@mander.xyz
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      11 months ago

      You must have hated DS9.

      I see TNG with mostly 2D characters where the Federation and its ideals are the main driving force of the plots. When they deviate from that is when you get bad episodes (cough Sub Rosa cough). The characters had to shed some of their depth and become idealized for message to shine through.

      On DS9, you have a gritty view of a frontier without the influence of the Federation. The evolution of the characters and how they react to the changing reality around them is the center stage, and for that you need 3D, flawed characters to build development arcs upon.

      Then on DSC you have perfect 2D characters in a corrupt world and the show is about Michael Burnham but she’s also perfect and I can’t see what message they’re trying to send.

      • Nate Cox
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        11 months ago

        I think DS9 set a precedent that was bad for the franchise, but I don’t hate it; the show felt like it understood its roots. I took DS9 as a way to explore how federation values addressed a galaxy not quite there yet.

        It didn’t diminish the hopeful future by saying that “actually the federation is evil" it just said “listen, we still have work to do”.

        Watching Cisco wrestle internally with reconciling who he knew he was supposed to be while the galaxy tested that was at least interesting on an intellectual level.

        I think that bit of nuance got lost though, so I do kinda wish it had never happened.

    • frezik@midwest.social
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      11 months ago

      It apparently would have been a direct follow-up to “A Piece of the Action”, the gangster planet episode. Which is probably the one Star Trek plot that would make sense for Tarantino.

    • Honytawk@lemmy.zip
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      11 months ago

      Meh, it is not like a Tarantino Star Trek movie is going to diminish the older series.

      I’d say let him try, and if it turns out bad, throw it on the pile of bad Star Trek movies.

      No real harm done.

    • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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      11 months ago

      So I agree mostly, but classic Trek also had plenty of looking at the present and past showing how bad things were/are/can be. It’s a hopeful message in that we can change and solve problems, but it doesn’t totally ignore issues either.

      I do agree the drama and action is a negative for it though. Some amount of its fine, but ST is about considering our reality through the lense of sci-fi and aliens, not just brainless entertainment. Star Wars already exists in that market. ST needs to do what it does well and not worry about trying to be as big as Star Wars. Endless growth is only going to kill the franchise.