Sunday, May 31, 2009

Scotty's Grapefruit Example

Of course!!! I am so DENSE! It kept bothering me why Scotty took a grapefruit for an example. It just hit me.
So wow... have the STXI creators been reading ASCEM or Farfalla's site? Fascinating.

Friday, May 29, 2009

Paradise Lost

Unwinding after a long week with The Final Frontier. Just right about 14 minutes in there is a view of the Paradise city gate on Nimbus. Graffiti artists have added "Lost" after the name, dripping down the post in whitewash. Haha cool!

Monday, May 18, 2009

Still digesting

I loved the new movie for its energy but I'm not going to post in detail about it just yet. I'm still letting it all sink in. Meanwhile I'm paper-blogging my impressions and their corollaries.
Update | 31 May: If I had to be honest with myself, I'd admit that part of my reluctance to blog at this point is that I am sick and tired of the internet and computers right now and I just don't want to touch them more than I have to.

Friday, May 8, 2009

It's his husband, Yahoo

George Takei and his husband
Yahoo Photo Gallery
I'm still pissed that Yahoo chose to caption this and George Takei "and guest."

Thursday, May 7, 2009

STXI Review One

My small-town theater was packed and apparently spontaneously added a second showing to take care of the overflow. I think this movie is going to some pretty respectable box office. And I think non-trekfans who just want to see a good science fiction movie will enjoy this.
But.
There is no but! I enjoyed it too! It's got laughs, it's got action, a tearjerker beginning...
The good guys are refreshingly heroic. A number of characters do selfless, extraordinary things, and Starfleet's "corporate" culture is one of service, altruism, and excellence. I love that. I never expected to find that again. Maybe "hope and change" is making optimism acceptable again.
Granted the villain is not all that compelling. The character is serviceable to move the plot forward and pleasing to look at. I loved the bridge of his nose. The bridge of his ship looked a bit like the Torchwood set.
The Cloverfield monster on the ice planet is a cool creature. I liked the combination spider and dog and flesh-eating plant, though I couldn't understand why it kept stopping to monologue instead of just eating Kirk. Especially since it had proven itself perfectly capable of doing just that already. It had me convinced (wrongly) that it was trying to communicate or something. So why was it even there, really?
And what the hell is red matter? Some sort of Applied Phlebotinum...
One thing that is very true to Jim Kirk is how he never shies away from a beating. He is still perfectly willing to endure discomfort and danger to further his goals. This is definitely the man who loans his body out to disembodied aliens because what the hell.
Spock is a little harder to figure out. Let me just first say I think I'm beginning to hate Quinto's upper lip. And why are his hair and eyebrows so stiff and unnatural?
I don't know if I can get used to this Spock. I think his relationship with Uhura is kind of cute and it "humanized" him. Only at the end does it begin to look like Jim could also "humanize" him (for want of a better word), and it's quite poignant that Spock Prime -- the one we know who is with the Jim we know in the timeline we know -- seeks to convince the new Spock to stay with the new Jim if he knows what's good for him. That still says everything about the original relationship. The new relationship could be anything, since everything has changed and nothing is inevitable.
Oh yeah and since everything has changed, Paramount, now is the time to be responsible and altruistic and finally get some realistic and positive gay characters in the Star Trek universe. In the Original Series, the choice of characters would have been obvious, but the real life culture was wrong for it. Now, the real life culture is more than ready for it, but I'm not so sure if there is an obvious character choice now.
I'm wait and see. This franchise is obviously good for a number of sequels.

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Own the story

Even though characters and series often fall in and out of slash's favor, mirroring the fickle tastes of popular culture, K/S has been thriving consistently for almost 40 years.

Newsweek

This Newsweek article informs us that an anonymous fan wrote a Don Quixote fic in 1614. I have always seen it as going back to Homeric times and even earlier. Say Homer came through your town and told absolutely awesome stories of a war and of a guy on a long trek. In a week or a month, Homer moves on, but you and your friends and family want to hear more stories. So you start telling your own. And your friend corrects you, saying Patroclus wouldn't act that way, or there is no evidence that Charybdis can swim per se, and Homer would never have told it that way. There you have fanfic, as romantic or dramatic as you like it thankyouverymuch, and you can spend all night around the fire debating the finer points of sea monster locomotion and the age of Achilles.
If you tell these stories enough in your locale, they may turn into your local mythology. I really think Star Trek has that kind of power, as long as people keep telling the stories they want to hear.