Amelia wrote: Fri May 09, 2025 5:34 am
I think that's because she doesn't help her get in and out of those dangerous places to complete those investigations or setups.
Agreed. Just like most humans, she is seeing things from her own (selfish) point of view. It is significant I think that her response to not getting complete cooperation is to decide that her "friend" should JUST DIE LIKE THE REST. This is no harmless and friendly little alien like Steven Spielberg's "E.T."!
It still depends on the premise i.e. misunderstanding and hostility in the absence of communication.
100% agreed!
In fact, it is not aliens, but rather humans who are the notable embodiment of this behavior, which people have always exterminated creatures that frighten them in the absence of full knowledge.
I have yet to be convinced that we humans have actually encountered outer space aliens, so I really can not say what they would really be like! I certainly agree with you on how humans behave. The usual imaginary outer space aliens in science fiction seem to be split into two camps: openly and relentlessly hostile like Alien, Predator, Borg, The Thing from Another World, War of the Worlds (Martians); or seemingly intelligent and peace-loving like E.T., Starman, Klaatu in The Day the Earth Stood Still.
I think that Star Trek at it best at least tried to acknowledge that different species just might have different interests and values, and that if humans decided to explore outer space and encounter them it just might be a good idea to approach those interactions thoughtfully instead of a knee-jerk immediate "Fire all phasers!"
We should not dismiss the entire human race because of the more "prominent and conspicuous" egregious behaviors.
That is what I have to keep telling myself...
I'm still enjoying some of the latest series, and while there's a lot to gripe about, that theme comes through all the time.
I am glad they have not discarded all the good parts, I just have not kept up entirely with the franchise. Which one is the latest series that you are talking about? I have honestly lost track of them all.
In other words, Dr. McCoy is glad that Kirk helps the kids release their grief correctly so they can get follow-up treatment.
Absolutely! McCoy is definitely on the side of medicine and psychology because he is concerned for his patients, and not just the human ones. Vulcans too even when they cause him grief, and giant rock monsters like the Horta.
Still, it just might be a cliche that when the Gorgan is exposed for being truly evil he suddenly turns hideously ugly and scary. Why doesn't he just continue to to look the same? Evil can have an attractive face. Kirk tells the children "Look how ugly he really is. Look at him and
don't be afraid." His physical ugliness is just too spot-on allegorical for me. How would the children react if this malicious monster consistently appeared as, say, a pretty 12-year-old girl who just wanted to play? Would they be so readily convinced by Kirk even with the alien shouting "Death. Death to you all. Death to you all!" if that alien still looked cute?
Personally I find little blonde girls much more terrifying than big ugly monsters, but maybe that is just me.
