Thursday, June 4, 2009

The new Star Trek movie

The new cast is absolutely spot on, echoing without mimicking.

The visual references to nearly everything in the scifi universe and the nonstop quotes from the original series and previous Trek movies gave fans a wink a minute.

And for those new to Trek, there was nonstop action from beginning to end (although I could have done without the monsters on the ice moon, but hey, it did make me giggle, as in ice moon Hoth and abominable snowman in Star Wars).

The echoing is thrown into brilliant relief when Chris Pine says "Bones" in the last scene.

What is amazing about The Ship of Dreams being constructed in The Field of Dreams is that we are taken from the real world we know in Iowa to the bridge of the Enterprise in all its looks-like-a-damn-Macintosh-designed-in-Cupertino-California glory (hat tip to the writer who said that first). That is why the first trailer showed us a real-life sweating human working with a blowtorch on a starship. Gorgeous on the inside and out. And they finally got jumping to warp right in the Battlestar way.

My only question is why is San Francisco so ugly in the 23rd century?

Even the basic symmetry is terrific: Woman has child but loses husband, leading to a lot of trouble; husband loses wife and child and look out!

Even the end credits are subversive by warping to terrestrial planet after terrestrial planet (gas giants need not apply). When Trek first premiered in the 60s, we had no evidence of extrasolar planets, except for a possible gas giant around Barnard's Star (which turned out not to be true). With the extrasolar planet tally at 349 so far, it doesn't even make the news when new ones are discovered unless they are relatively close to Earth mass or orbit in a possible habitable zone. The ancients vaguely suspected. With thousands to be discovered and characterized over the next decade, finally yielding estimates for terrestrial planets in the hundreds of billions, to us other planets have become a yawn.

The most subversive of all is the multiverse point of view: this universe that we see is only one of the 10 raised to the 500th power possible universes. Because there is a finite number of quantum states in a universe, with a sufficiently large number of universes, the patterns statistically repeat. Everything that can happen has happened, is happening, and will happen again.

As Copernicus dethroned us from a special place in the universe, and as Darwin dethroned us from a special place in nature, so we are ultimately dethroned from a special time and reality.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiverse

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