I know we have fans of one or the other and even both.

What are your loves and hates?







Why is the Enterprise so low in the atmosphere, I mean besides the fact that her shields would be able to withstand the Laser based weapons on the death star, it would be highly dangerous for her to operate in such a low orbit. She would only be able to manoeuvre on thrusters, and the warp drive would have to be offline.les wrote:
We all have our moments

Banquo wrote:Why is the Enterprise so low in the atmosphere, I mean besides the fact that her shields would be able to withstand the Laser based weapons on the death star, it would be highly dangerous for her to operate in such a low orbit. She would only be able to manoeuvre on thrusters, and the warp drive would have to be offline.les wrote:
We all have our moments
Ok i'm gonna stop now before I get uber nerd on you all.
Banquo

True that when writing fiction you can pretty much make up your own rules as to how your technology works, but once you have set those rules, it can be a little hard to change them. For example in Star Trek, if a ship goes to warp within the gravity well of a planet, your'e gonna see some serious shit. Couple that with how close the enterprise was to the earth and those storm troopers and it's destruction would likely have a similar effect to this.....les wrote: If you watch "Mythbusters" you would know that Hollywood has its own laws of physics.
OR
"It's surprising what you can do when the script writer is on your side"



I too have been watching Trek since I was a young child, I would agree with others above that Star Wars is more of fantasy than a sci fi. But although Star Trek seems to focus on the science, the original at least is highly grounded in classical mythology with Episodes like Who mourns for Adonis, and Platos step children (both where the crew encounter descendants of ancient Greek gods.) being obvious links to this. And good old fashioned story telling, with episodes like Balance of Terror (which is clearly a naval warfare submarine drama) and straight dramas like The Conscience of the King where Kirk confronts a man who he believes is a mass murderer. What you have throughout the original series is the triumvirate of Kirk, McCoy and Spock. Which is where I would tend to disagree with you on the new film, I thought it pretty much captured the spirit of the original series and presented in a modern way. The destruction of Vulcan being a pivotal plot point in the movie, I can see it as a necessary occurrence. I look forward to seeing how they do with the follow up.Sam86 wrote:Never really got in touch with Star Wars. Havne't even seen all the movies although I'm a big fan of Science Fiction. Star Wars just doesn't do it for me ^^
Staarted watching the Original Series of Star Trek when I was about 9 or 10 years old I think. Ever since then I've been a fan of it![]()
Seen all the Movies (the newest one is totally horrible, you just can't let them blow up Vulcan...), pretty much all the Series (except for the newest one again
). Even have DS9 and Voyager on DVD.
Me and my sister have around 150 Star Trek books at home....
Any more questions?