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Paul Levinson

Paul Levinson
Location
New York City, New York, USA
Birthday
March 25
Title
Professor
Company
Fordham University
Bio
Paul Levinson's The Silk Code won the 2000 Locus Award for Best First Novel. He has since published Borrowed Tides (2001), The Consciousness Plague (2002), The Pixel Eye (2003), and The Plot To Save Socrates (2006). His science fiction and mystery short stories have been nominated for Nebula, Hugo, Edgar, and Sturgeon Awards. His eight nonfiction books, including The Soft Edge (1997), Digital McLuhan (1999), Realspace (2003), and Cellphone (2004), have been the subject of major articles in the New York Times, Wired, the Christian Science Monitor, and have been translated into ten languages. New New Media, exploring how Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, and blogging have changed our lives, was published in September 2009. Paul Levinson appears on "The O'Reilly Factor" (Fox News), "The CBS Evening News," the “NewsHour with Jim Lehrer” (PBS), “Nightline” (ABC), and numerous national and international TV and radio programs. He reviews the best of television in his InfiniteRegress.tv blog. Paul Levinson is Professor of Communication & Media Studies at Fordham University in New York City

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MAY 7, 2009 11:51PM

Star Trek: Reborn, Reset, Resplendent

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Star Trek, since its birth in our popular culture in 1966 on NBC television, has led a remarkable life. Canceled after three seasons due to an insufficiently large audience - of which my wife (then my girlfriend) and I were devotedly among - Star Trek went on to break the hold of network television, with a series of series beginning with Star Trek: The Next Generation that went directly into successful syndication. As I pointed out in How Star Trek Liberated Television, this in retrospect was the beginning of television entertainment on cable and the Internet which is still burgeoning today. Along the way, Star Trek had some of best time travel stories (City on the Edge of Forever in the original series, Yesterday's Enterprise in The Next Generation) - keep that in mind - as well as some of the best humans meet alien stories ever told. I truly believe that when we eventually get beyond our solar system with faster-than-light travel in centuries to come - who knows, maybe decades - we will still be inspired by Star Trek as we navigate our way through the cosmos.

Star Trek also inspired other works in popular culture, including a whole bunch of movies, most of which were not as good, not even close, to best of Star Trek television. This is the challenge that J. J. Abrams and his colleagues took up when they set out to make a new Star Trek movie.

They decided to make a movie about the original crew and characters - Kirk, Spock, McCoy, Scotty, Uhura, Sulu, Chekov - before and during their first meeting up on the Enterprise. A movie about Star Trek Academy, detailing some of these budding relationships, had been talked about for decades. Abrams could have made such a movie, and it would no doubt have been excellent, a real delight for the fans, and everyone.

Instead, J. J. Abrams decided to something better. The reason, I'm sure, is that he didn't want to be locked into telling the same stories we already saw on television all those years ago, once again, now, on the big screen, if this movie succeeded. Nor did he want to be confined to filling in the gaps of what we already know about Kirk, Spock, et al....

So .... Abrams did something very different indeed. And here the story of the new Star Trek begins....

[[[SPOILERS  BELOW HERE]]]

 

 

Kirk's father dies at the hands of Romulans, as Kirk's mother, pregnant with James T., escapes in a shuttle. The father has been Captain for all of 12 minutes. Some 25 years later, James Tiberius Kirk and Dr. Leonard "Bones" McCoy do meet up at Starfleet Academy. Uhura, whom Kirk has unsuccessfully flirted with, is there, too. And, of course, so is Spock, who is ahead of Kirk, and puts him to a famous test-

But the Romulans attack again - this time, Planet Vulcan. Star Fleet sends out a whole bunch of ships - including the Enterprise with Captain Pike in command, and Spock the science officer. By the time they get to Vulcan, Pike is in Romulan hands, and despite the best heroic efforts of Kirk and Sulu, and Spock, now in command, Planet Vulcan is destroyed, and along with it, Spock's mother-

Wait a minute! Vulcan destroyed? But didn't we see the planet, numerous times, in various episodes of various series of Star Trek? And Spock's mother, too?

Yes, of course we did! So, what's going on?

J. J. Abrams, in the sharp script written by Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman (all three of current Fringe fame), are giving us a splendid time travel story (shades of Lost). We get this spelled out to us in detail when young Kirk meets old Spock - played by Leonard Nimoy - who explains that Romulans killed Kirk's father after being whipped back in time from a future in which old Spock failed to save the Romulan home world.... And old Spock has been pulled back through time, too.

Now, if I were a sufficiently versed fan, I would have noticed at the beginning that this was another Star Trek universe - not quite the one we have seen on television and in theaters all of these years. Because no one ever said in a word in those about Kirk's father dying a few seconds after he was born. But Vulcan destroyed was more than enough to wake even me up that we were seeing something very different and daring here in which ...

Everything is new, to some lesser or greater extent, except old Spock, who has seen everything that we have on the screens over the years. Young Spock, smartly played by Heroes' Zachary Quinto, is also a new Spock - who has lost his mother and his planet, just as the new Kirk, perfectly played by Chris Pine, has lost his father. And young Spock (call him Spock 2) now lives in the same version of reality (call it Universe 2) as does old Spock (call him Spock 1).

There are other nice differences. Spock 2 has a romantic relation with - Uhura, who's given a winning, sassy, refreshing performance by Zoe Saldana. But McCoy, wonderfully played by Karl Urban, is just and sarcastically funny as he should. And Simon Pegg's Scotty, John Cho's Sulu, and Anton Yelchin's Chekov are also fine and satisfyingly in character and ambiance - though poor Chekov, only 17 in the movie, and on the Enterprise earlier than he was in the original television series, is still stuck with that laughable Russian accent.

But Abrams has done the seemingly impossible, and done it with style and savvy - he has given us a genuinely new Star Trek, from the very beginning, with a genuinely new story - and even given us a witness to the original that we all grew up with, in the person of the original, older Spock.  The story will live long and prosper indeed.


See also How Star Trek Liberated Television

 


15-min podcast review of the new Star Trek

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Just got back from seeing the IMAX version here in LA. Absolutely fantastic film! This one fired on all cylinders. LOVED the dialogue. I agree that Karl Urban's Bones was flawlessly acted and extremely funny. But I also thought that Simon Pegg's version of Scotty was quite a few notches up from fine and satisfying.

Run to see this film!
Paul, I've seen a number of glowing reviews so this is definitely a movie I'll be seeing!
Wonderful film, saw it last night. It has almost no flaws except maybe the villain is not very memorable but it wasn't about the bad guy anyway.
Holy Earth 2, Batman!

I had no idea; the whole alternate universe thing frees me to enjoy the movie in a new way. The Japanese have been doing the same sort of thing for ages now - killed off your characters at the end of the series? Do a sequel with the same characters, only slightly different, and pretend the first one never happened!
Will probably see it today . . . and I'm one who rarely sees a movie until it's out on DVD. I'm not a trekkie -- and I don't even want to picture a 62-year-old woman as a trekkie! -- but a fan of the original series from way back.

Coincidentally (or maybe not?) the wonderful "Galaxy Quest" comes out on DVD this week. Even if you're not a Star Trek fan, you might well love this little gem which features Tim Allen, Alan Rickman and Sigourney Weaver -- a blonde, busty Weaver, no less -- in a spoof of the series and trekkies. (Paul, since you're an obvious ST fan, I'd be interested to know if you've seen GQ and, if so, what you thought of it.)
I thought Galaxy Quest was excellent (and hilarious)!
The Lovely Lady T and I are going to see it tonight. I'm just wondering if the Imax version would be better to see, or would it be so big that you miss the galaxy for the stars (
I enjoyed the first of your post and it further stoked me up about seeing this film I'm already anxious to see (being a fan of the original, too from waaaay back then!) and I will return and read the rest of your thoughts after viewing. Thanks for the spoiler alert!
It's on my agenda for this evening--my husband is buying tickets this afternoon, so we won't face the dreaded SOLD OUT sign. Hooray for a rejuvenated Trek!
Yeah, when I read the spoiler about Kirk's Dad I was tipped off...I knew they were killed by, uh, was it Kodos, related in "Conscience of the King" during a selective triage (settlers on a planet didn't have enough food). I may be off target, it's been many years...
Just back from seeing it... as a tepid fan...the movie stayed true to its action format and tried to build a story. Good job...!

Hats off to JJ Abrams who dared to go where others have been
before !
Ok, I'll admit that one of the subjects I took in high school was Star Trek, the class was held everynight at 10 on TV55. I will also admit that for the most part I enjoyed the new film. However, the product placements for Nokia and Budweiser really were anathema to everything Star Trek was about. Not to mention that it didn't even make sense within Star Trek's universe...but I'll save that argument for the hardcore fans.
Just saw it. Loved. The best Star Trek movie since Galaxy Quest, or maybe the classic SNL cancellation skit, in which the dread suits from Planet Paramount prove more intransigent than an army of Romulans.
wsavio - take a course in Time Travel 101 - that will explain everything to you ...
Ok, Paul, you wanted to bring the full geek on, so here it is. I must warn others that if you don't want to read a debate on Star Trek minutiae, stop reading now.

The time line changes the day Kirk was born, which is in 2233. Everything prior to the moment of Nero's arrival remains exactly as it happened in the original canon. I can find no evidence to suggest otherwise, and old Spocks appearance supports this claim as well. Therefore the Eugenics Wars (Khan) occurred." According to the Star Trek Encyclopedia, "Entire populations were bombed out of existence, and Earth was on the verge of a new dark age." This occurs in the 1990's. Somehow, I don't see how Nokia maintained a cell phone business during such turmoil. But even if they did, fifty years later, there was nuclear World War III where "much of Earth reverted to a barbaric state." So Nokia survived two catastrophic collapses of civilization? Damn, I think I'd better invest some serious cash in this company. I'm a little more forgiving of the Budweiser thing, as there are breweries in Europe that are centuries old and have survived world wars, although none have survived a nuclear war. Now as far as having taken Time Travel 101, I think you'll have to agree Paul that my argument is simple logic.

I should also mention that I don't think product placement is inherently wrong. When done right, it can feel very organic. The James Bond movies are perfect examples. It can even be done well in Science Fiction movies that take place in the future a la Minority Report. But what I believe Star Trek always stood for was a time when humans had finally moved past our vices of racism, sexism, tribalism and greed. And that is why product placement shouldn't be in any Star Trek film.

Check my page out soon for my more fleshed out review of Star Trek.
I think you make a good point about Nokia and Budweiser not likely to have survived the Eugenics Wars, but it's not logically decisive - in the way that, say, the death of Khan before the Romulan time travel would have been absolutely in contradiction of the time line we know, and not due to the Romulan time travel.

But, as you say about Budweiser, breweries have survived world wars in Europe, elements of popular culture from the past (such as Plutarch's Lives, etc) survived the fall of Rome and the black plague, etc. So, it's not impossible that somehow Nokia might have survived.

But I agree that the time lines shown in the movie would have been cleaner without the product placement.
I loathed this movie. IT was awful. It was a basic action movie with Abrams re-purposing his silly time travel storyline nonsense from Lost. The plot was absolute garbage and there really was no reason to create any 'alternate universe.'

Some fine acting acting aside, just horrific, really.