I think if I had given Kirk and the others what I suspect 23rd century values and morals may actually be, they would have either angered or scared the pants off the average viewer.

Gene Roddenberry (x)

THIS.  This is exactly what Star Trek XIII should do.  ST09 and STID were too CONSERVATIVE.  Go there, do that.  YES.  Boldly go, motherfuckers!

(via klinfield)

Gene Roddenberry wanted an LGBT character to appear on TNG, but died before it could happen. JJ Abrams made some noises about having LGBT representation in the reboots, but did nothing. C’mon people, it’s the 23rd century! [link]

readysteadytrek:

He has tried scanning space itself to get Jim back, if you don’t think that he’d do it again, then you’re quite wrong.

No, but can you imagine being a Trekkie when Wrath of Khan was in theaters?

gardnerhill:

highpriestessofjogan:

Like…they killed Spock…

I would have been on the floor of the theater sobbing my heart out during the scene at the reactor, and I might have just drowned from my tears during the funeral.  How did people emotionally survive that experience?  And Leonard Nimoy doing the voiceover at the end?  

HOW DID PEOPLE SURVIVE THAT MOVIE?  

Honey. I was there.

I was a Star Trek fan when that meant you were a fan of that one, old, cancelled TV show from the 60s in perpetual reruns on Channel 5. After eagerly waiting all year only to be bored and disappointed by ST:TMP, I knew Wrath of Khan was going to be good – the real ST mojo was back in all the rumors flying (pre-Internet). Nicholas Meyer, author of the brilliant Sherlock Holmes book and movie The Seven Percent Solution (which offered a theory as to what actually happened when Holmes “died” at Reichenbach Falls), was at the helm.

And I was in the theater first day. We laughed our asses off at “Aren’t you dead?” (because the rumor that Spock would die had been leaked – ha ha, whew! Just that Kobayashi simulation!).

And there wasn’t a sound, or a dry eye, in the theater, when Spock died.

Well, except for mine. I didn’t cry when Spock died. I didn’t cry at the funeral scene.

But when Kirk puts his glasses down in his room, and one lens is cracked – the one lens destroyed, making both lenses useless…I started bawling. I know symbolism when I see it.

(Nicholas Meyer also uses broken glasses to show profound change in his stories – HG Wells breaks his glasses travelling into the future in TIME AFTER TIME, and John Lithgow’s character has one cracked glasses lens after the nuclear bomb hits in THE DAY AFTER.)

So, yeah. That was an unforgettable experience.

And it’s also why I refused to see ST: Into Darkness. JJ Abrams took the most profoundly moving moment in ST Canon and crapped on it like it was the biggest joke ever.