verslibre wrote:Zedul wrote:Monker wrote: I'll throw out there is it's humorous that people actually think of BSG as 'anti-trek'
It totally is.
The main premises of Trek:
1. Technology will save us and create almost a future utopia.
2. Alien life exists everywhere in the damn galaxy - even though 99% of the time they look just like humans with bumpy foreheads or point ears.
3. God does not exist or is never even referred to outside of TOS and plays no part in the destiny of, well, anything.
ST was Gene Roddenberry's vision of the future. Technology advances and in fact some of TOS tech has been seen in our lifetime.
TNG explained why alien life looks similar in the Trek universe...but, I guess you were not paying attention.
Religion and religious politics played a major role on DS9....which is probably why it played such a part in BSG, since Ron Moore was a writer on DS9.The main premises of BSG:
1. Technology will only make our problems worse.
2. There is no life in the galaxy except for animals, humans - and the stuff they make.
3. God not only exists, but so do angels and they are constantly "guiding" humanity towards a destiny and forcing people to make choices.
BSG was created by Glen A. Larson who used Erich von Däniken's "Chariots of the Gods" as a major influence. So, while there may only be humanity "out there"...there is still SOMETHING out there. The entire intro to BSG:TOS is almost Trek like, "There are those who believe that life here began out there..." This theme was carried from TOS by Ron Moore in his version of the show. It is not as different as you seem to think.
Tech is not futuristic as it is in Trek...it is modern. It is a difference in looking at the world...being futuristic and being modern. That does not make it anti-Trek...just a different concept.
Again, the God thing was written by Ron Moore on DS9. The concept was influenced from Trek....not anti-Trek.Those two series (and I am speaking mainly of Trek from Next Gen on...) are about as opposite in viewpoint as the Shadows and the Vorlons. If you are uncomfortable with the idea of God as an idea and simply are scared witless by any philosophizing about the nature of God and the universe OR your are a religious fundamental with very strict viewpoints on how YOU think God should be then obviously the very nature of the show may make you uncomfortable. But that doesn't mean it's not brilliant.
I'm not uncomfortible with this discussion at all.
What Ron Moore did was not 'brilliant', or unique, or anti-Trek. he simply took his experience on DS9 and updated BSG. Nothing more...and the only way he could keep his audience captivated and his show in the spotlight, was to throw some shocking scene in every episode.