Archive for May, 2009

Getting to the point of Spock ears

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

After seeing the movie Star Trek for the fourth time, I realized one of the things I like about it comes from a childhood experience. In the scene where Spock as a child is ridiculed and bullied for being part human. When I was in the third grade I was teased mercilessly for being like “Spock” because I have one pointed ear.  Here is a webcam image to help illustrate (in case you are wondering – no the photo has not been worked or altered in Photoshop). My ear looks less dramatic now than it did when I was a kid. But it is definitely not your run-of-the-mill normal person ear. (As far as I know.  If anyone else who has a similar ear would write or send a picture, that would be swell).

In the movie, seeing the fictional depiction of children from another world carrying out such taunts is a powerful reminder of just how common this is for real people.  It is a frightening aspect of human nature to me.  It’s both brutal and common.  It reveals the primitive parts of our brains hard at work overriding the more evolved parts.

When I was a kid I didn’t think anyone knew that kids were doing such mean things to each other (or particularly, me). Of course, now, I believe that being different as a kid helped me to see difference as something to embrace and diversity as a source of strength. It probably also explains my love of sci-fi as a genre – there were alternative better worlds to live on,  or at least to dream of. So, two cheers for pointed ears!

Star Trek – The new movie goes where TOS went before

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

It won’t surprise anyone who knows me that I saw the new Star Trek film twice opening weekend; once on a regular screen and once on an IMAX screen. (The IMAX screen is worth the couple of extra bucks IMHO. :-) After seeing it the first time, I knew I really liked it even though I felt unsettled by it.

I got home after the first viewing and began to hunt for other people’s reactions, especially hardcore fans. I was so surprised to find so much resistance to the film. I kept seeing all this language calling it a “reboot” While, I guess there is a certain truth to this idea of a “reboot,” that idea was established as a possibility well within the first season of TOS.

In the episode, “The City on the Edge of Forever” the Enterprise and her crew experience the same kind of issue that makes the “reboot” possible in the new Star Trek. In the TOS episode, the Enterprise is orbiting a planet that is emitting waves of time distortion and causing turbulence for the ship. After Sulu is injured on the bridge, Bones revives him with a substance call Cordresine. But just after, during a final wave of turbulence, Bones accidentally injects himself with the remaining Cordresine and becomes temporarily mad and escapes to the planet’s surface. Kirk, Spock, Uhura, Scotty and other crew, beam down to retrieve him.

On the planet’s surface, they find a large donut-shaped architectural object planted vertically in the ground.  Spock determines this object is at the center of the time distortions. After making condescending remarks to Spoke about his primitive knowledge of science, it announces to them that it is the Guardian of Forever. It is a portal through time.

Meanwhile Bones come out from hiding and leaps through the portal to evade being captured. Immediately thereafter, all contact is lost with the Enterprise. The Guardian tells Kirk and crew that time has changed and that all they knew and all their futures are gone – changed.

By going into the Earth’s past, Bones becomes a random element of change and alters the course of human history. Of course, in this episode, Kirk and Spock also leap through the portal to rescue Bones and prevent him from changing the past.  Of course they are successful and manage to restore their timeline. But had they not been successful, the result would have been exactly what happened in the Star Trek movie; an altered future.

In using the actual mythology of TOS, the creators of the latest film have managed truly to stick with the Star Trek universe as it was created by Roddenberry and managed to clear the slate for new stories. I think fans, if they believe in the mythology of TOS, must accept, logically if you will, that the events of the new movie are within the consistency of what has been possible all along.

It just so happens that each time the Enterprise and her crew have tinkered with time travel it’s always gone right. Now, we’ve seen a story about what happens when time travel fails. Stories that glorify warring/fighting easily demonstrate the high price to pay for war. We see the what the ugly side of fighting and warring is: death and destruction. Time travel stories in the Star Trek universe, always show the whimsical side of the notion of time travel.  But we’ve never been forced to face up to the science-fiction reality of tinkering with time; until now.