Re: Favorite Enterprise Episode of all time
Posted: Sat Jul 17, 2010 3:50 pm
I think Demon's response was directed at Tyyr rather than at me, but it's not specified, so I'll look at a couple of points therein.
Agrred. Like the resolution of the KFP, I thought the treatment of the Andorians was done well, and was a great thing to have included in the series. However, having a few good things doesn't change in the least the bad things - which I have enumerated earlier.Demon971 wrote:...like how Enterprise involved a long-time known species (the Andorians) that had otherwise been a seen-but-obscure species until ENT gave them a face. I believe they did a good job at it, the blue skins were interesting and less as comical as I had once thought.
Yes, it's possible. It's possible that all the starships we've seen in previous incarnations of 'Trek were the exceptions, and that by a miraculous oddity those were the only ones we saw, and that the vast majority of UFP ships (which we never saw, by said miraculous chance) all bore a striking resemblance to a low-rider 1962 Chevy Impala. However, it's so incredibly unlikely as to be ridiculous to believe that this is the case.Demon971 wrote:The starship evolution is complete conjecture. We've never seen every single ship from our lowly orbital shuttle to the 25th century Prometheus. We've only seen fragments from here and there in between. Who's to say that a ship design couldn't have looked that way in the mid 22nd century?
There are reasons those things don't become mainstream. Logistical or otherwise, those reasons are valid. Caseless ammo is a great idea, but has never performed in practice well enough to overcome its drawbacks and replace cased ammo. If the NX was so ahead of its time, the entire succession of subsequent ship designs would have looked like it.Demon971 wrote:Like many things invented nowadays that're ahead of their time and do not become mainstream.
Someone's reasons for disliking ENT are just as valid as yours for liking it. Even if you don't think others are entitled to their opinions, the amount of people who dislike the things you mention should let you know that this dislike has some credence.Demon971 wrote:All they kept doing is practically quoting the same inane bullshit (about the NX-Akira, the time travel over doing, etc). Most their points were same as each other, just worded slightly differently, so I surmised that they were just going with the flow like good little sheep.
If I dislike a show because of production factors, how is that reason irrelevant? Anything that affects my opinion of a show is relevant. Abstract or not, you're an idiot if you dismiss reasons that affect a viewer's opinion of the show.Demon971 wrote:reasons that aren't abstract or production-based irrelevancy.
Again, this is pure BS designed to (fallaciously) knock the arguments against which ENT can not defend. If someone doesn't like the way a particular actor performs, then the presence of that actor is intimitely relevant to that viewer's opinion of the show. Everything you say here is tantamount to "I disagree with you, so you're arguments don't count," or more generally, "nyah-nyah-nyah, I can't hear you!"Demon971 wrote:Also bias towards actors/directors is more of personal preference than generality, and as such isn't reflective of the entire show because other people may actually like those actors/directors.
You may continue to believe that, even though it's been expressed here that people have valid (not to mention glaring) reasons for disliking ENT, and it's been shown that your analysis is patently not the case. You may also continue to believe that Elvis Presely is living in my crawlspace, and that I go through deep-fried peanut butter and banana sandwiches like nobody's business. You began this particular conversation asking why 'Trek fans who disliked ENT seemed close-minded about it; when in fact you have just proven that you are close-minded to the point at which you don't believe anyone is entitled to an opinion different from yours, and that valid reasons supporting differing opinions will be completely ignored by you.Demon971 wrote:continuing to believe that all the anti-ENT Star Trek fans are really just scared of change and because Enterprise was quite different from the usual Star Trek sandbox, they couldn't accept that and instead chose to hate it irregardless of it's merits. The good things don't matter, when it's so much easier to focus on the bad no matter how inconsequential. That way there's more to fuel the hatred, and it'll proliferate to the point that you'll never have to worry about explaining the hatred because it'll just become unanimous, like a social cancer. Good stuff.