My friend Penny Williamson and I spent Friday afternoon at a matinée of the new Star Trek movie. We both loved it. It manages to simultaneously be fresh and innovative and yet true to the original. The actors do a fabulous job of capturing the characters we know so well, in mannerism and vocal patterns (and the way the writers wrote their dialogue). You can really believe these characters will grow into the characters from the original tv series. And yet the new actors never seem to be mimicking, they make the characters their own. Since I love to move back and forth in time in my own writing and examine my characters at different points in their history, I particularly enjoyed the prequel aspect.
As I’ve mentioned in past blogs, Penny and I both love to talk about favorite series. When we first became friends, we spent endless lunches analyzing and speculating over Dorothy Dunnett’s books (this was in the years when the House of Niccolò series was still being written and published). More recently, we could be found picking apart Alias over lattes in our favorite café. Waiting for the movie to start Friday, we were discussing the season finale of Lost. Penny and I’ve been discussing Lost a lot lately. In fact, we talked about it for the entire five hour plus drive from the San Francisco Bay Area to Ashland, Oregon, on our recent trip to the Oregon Shakespeare Festival. Lost fascinates and baffles both of us. Usually we can come up with a theory about where we think a story arc is headed (wrong perhaps to varying degrees but at least a theory that works with the information at hand). With Lost, every time we think we have something figured out, the next episode pulls the rug out from under us.
I blogged a while back about the delights of speculating over a series. Part of it of course is trying to unravel the plot. When I was a teenager, my mom and I had numerous discussions about Star Wars in the years between The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi. I still remember the moment when, thinking about Arthurian mythology, I said “oh, I know, Luke and Leia are brother and sister.” Of course, I was thrilled to be proved right when we saw Return of the Jedi (the day it opened). But mostly, I was relieved to see the characters I cared about get the happy ending I so wanted them to have. Thinking about Star Trek and Lost, I realized how much of the allure of an ongoing series is the characters. Characters you care about and root for. Characters who seem to have a rich inner life off the screen/page. Characters you want to learn more about. Characters whose fates seem very real and a matter of great concern (I confess to having tears in my eyes at one point in the new Star Trek movie, and the recent Lost season finale definitely left me choked up).
I returned to the world of another favorite series recently when I read Laurie King’s The Language of Bees. It was a delight to step back into Russell & Holmes’s world. When I finished the book, I didn’t want to leave that world (partly because of the questions left to be answered in the next installment, but mostly because I wanted to spend more time with these characters). I’ve been rereading earlier books in the series since, unable to move on to something new.
What makes you bond with the characters in a particular series? Have you seen the new Star Trek movie? Do you watch Lost? If so, do you have the faintest idea of where the show is headed? :-).
Returning to my own series, this week’s Fraser Correspondence addition is Cecily Summers’s reply to Mélanie’s letter from last week about their children and the Edinburgh premiere of Simon’s play.
May 18, 2009 at 12:21 am
Well, overall, I really liked it. But I’m still mad at them for killing off a certain beloved character just for drama.
Honestly, Walt Disney has a lot to answer for.
And I am puzzled. I understand that this is an “alternate reality” that forked off from the original series – too much canon to overcome otherwise.
So, I get why Kirk is different. (The events at the beginning of the movie)
But how did past events change Spock so much? Not that I don’t find it interesting.
May 18, 2009 at 6:21 am
Yes, that character’s death was very sad. I’d have been more upset if I hadn’t enjoyed the rest of the movie so well (and it did work in the context of the plot).
You’re right, Kirk’s life from birth on was more obviously affected by the changed events than Spock’s. But I guess the idea would be that once you change one thing, it can ripple out in all manner of directions, to affect the lives of those not directly involved in the original incident. The incident that opens the movie would have had political implications, Spock’s father was an ambassador to Earth, his life and therefore Spock’s childhood might have been affected by the changed reality. I did find the changed Spock quite interesting!
May 19, 2009 at 1:47 am
I still think this particular character death was cheap drama.
I mean, he’d lost enough – it’s not as if he hadn’t gone through enough trama without this one death.
But then, female characters are often expendable – leaving Hero to go on with life without the distractions of family.
May 19, 2009 at 1:58 am
I think they thought they needed to give Spock a family trauma to equal Kirk’s loss of his father. Something that would cut deep enough to break through his logical detachment.
I too have always hated it when female characters die to leave the hero to go on with his adventures (much as I love the Richard Sharpe books, I never quite got over the loss of Teresa). On the other hand, the Star Trek movie did give Spock a bond to another woman, which I found quite interesting…:-).
May 20, 2009 at 5:27 am
I did find this ‘bond’ very interesting. I wonder if it will last. The series all avoided long term relationships for the most part. Except Voyager with Tom and B’lanna. Rather annoying, to show us characters with chemistry and never actually fullfill it. (Riker and Deannna never really got together until one of the later movies – loved the bath scene!)
I’m not saying that romance has to be part of all entertainment, but these are young, healthy, vital, intelligent characters who live in dangerous times – it’s ridiculous to have them in “almost, but not quite” situations for years and years.
I wonder if there will be books based in this Alternate Reality.
May 20, 2009 at 5:48 am
I hope it lasts. One of the things I missed in the original Star Trek (I never watched TNG series, though I did see some of the movies) was on ongoing long term romantic relationships. It’s odd, while I often prefer stories where the love story isn’t the central focus, most of my favorite books/movies/plays/tv shows have some sort of romantic/relationship thread. This was just right I thought–subtle, touching, and quite believable.
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