clearspira wrote: ↑Wed Aug 01, 2018 9:54 pm
Is there really a difference between my views on Star Trek Discovery and your views on Frank Miller's Batman, or ''One More Day'', or the New 52 Teen Titans? These things took something you love, spat them out and rendered them a shell of their former selves, yes? Apply that to what I think about STD and you will start to have some idea as to why we get so vitriolic about it. (And with respect sir, you are hardly a shrinking violet yourself when you talk about these works).
As for a bad story not making old stuff suddenly unpalatable, I present to you ''Identity Crisis'' where you point out that the mind rape of Batman actually does retroactively damage many previous stories because now that despicable act is always in the background. Every heroic speech about doing the right thing is now tainted by the fact that they attacked their friend and comrade and went on with their lives for years with nary a word.
Weeeeell, to explain how it's different to me, at least:
-With One More Day, I hate the story because of how it fundamentally goes against what I feel is the core of the character and expressed my discontent in my review and stuck to my vow to never buy another book where Peter Parker as Spidey is the lead and title character. I do not go after those that still enjoy the series or steer the direction of a conversation towards specifically why I hate the character for this single thing at every opportunity. Sure, I'll make jokes about it, but people can like what they like and we can discuss things without THAT being the subject. I also don't say that it "Ruined my childhood" or the like. It was a bad story that made it so that I could not personally enjoy any more stories and I moved on.
-Frank Miller's Batman exists in its own little world where it's just terrible, Year One notwithstanding.
-As bad as the New 52 Titans book was, it was a reboot telling its own story. I did not feel personally betrayed by it - it was just a bad book that eventually got shelved, anyway.
As a critic, it's my job to critique - to see things that are problems and explain why I think something is a problem. But by that same token, I don't have to agree with what other people find to be a problem. Nor do they have to agree with my own thoughts. I also don't have to constantly feel like I need my opinions validated by insulting others about their own tastes, which I see all-too often.
Superhero comics, with that retroactive continuity is definitely a problem that can hurt a character because of what it implies is happening behind the scenes. I don't disagree, and it's one of the problems of Discovery - showing us things that seem at odds with what we had already established (I personally do not like this version of Sarek - he seems too warm, forgiving, and kind compared to what we have seen of him in the past - particularly around this time period). But that's a problem that's limited to what I feel should be a strong continuity given how this is SUPPOSED to be in the Prime timeline. For others, who may have this be their first Star Trek series, that's not an issue for them. Nor is it one for me that is SO BAD that I have to condemn the entire show for it.