Gotten a bit nitpicky, haven't you? Nobody said that Roger Ebert was SF saavy. He doesn't know the tech or I suspect even cares how the technobabble is supposed to make sense or what it describes. He's working from the perspective of a movie viewer.
Master of Ossus wrote:Roger Ebert wrote:Surely slavery is not an efficient economic system in a world of hyperdrives, but never mind.
First of all, they use warp engines in Star Trek. Obviously he's been panning SW movies for so long all sci-fi movies seem the same to him. Moreover, how can slavery not be an efficient economic system? If anything it is the epitomy of economics. It is morally reprehensible and completely unjustifiable, but that does not make it inefficient. It "merely" makes it wrong.
Well, slavery is an inefficent system. It assumes that you have outside markets to sell the product of no-cost labour to, but it retards economic development at home; plus there's the expense in maintaining a prison system and security. However, since the entire premise behind the
Trek universe is that everything is either replicated or produced out of automated assembly plants, and you've got phaser drills to mine out materials, robots to perform the actual labour, and transporters to move everything around in, the spectacle of the slave mines doesn't quite fit in even with the Romulans, and is clichéd after all this time. Slave mines were a feature of
Buck Rogers and
Flash Gordon after all, and incompatible with a space civilisation which is supposed to have all these wonderful technological toys.
As for Ebert not knowing the difference between "warp drive" and "hyperdrive" and which SF universe claims either, c'mon, that's picking gnatshit out of pepper. Both are FTL, and most people wouldn't know or care about the difference between either system or probably think it resides in a Black Box. It has nothing to do with the substance of the review.
Master of Ossus wrote:Roger Ebert wrote:I've been looking at these stories for half a halftime, and, let's face it, they're out of gas.
You've been watching it for 7.5 minutes?
Oh please —"half a halftime" is a rather obvious misprint, don't you think?
Master of Ossus wrote:Roger Ebert wrote:This far in the future they wouldn't have sparks because they wouldn't have electricity, because in a world where you can beam matter--beam it, mind you--from here to there, power obviously no longer lives in the wall and travels through wires.
Let me get this straight. Ebert believes that in the future there will no longer be a need for wires because energy can be beamed back and forth? What will that energy run on? If its electricity it NEEDS A FUCKING COMPLETE CIRCUIT TO WORK! How can he not understand this? Has Ebert never even bothered to look at an electronic device (like, a camera, or a projector)?
Whether Ebert is as ignorant of basic electrical wiring as you make him out to be (and sadly quite a lot of people are that ignorant), the point is that the "exploding console" spectacle is becoming a very shopworn cliché, along with the spontaneously spewing fire extinguishers which are never aimed at where the fires actually are but just fill the bridge with smoke, and the ship shaking as if it's in an 8.5 earthquake during battle. More than one person has commented about how the engineers in the
Star Trek future seem to have forgotten about a little something called the circuit breaker. In the whole of TOS, there were only three incidents of consoles shorting out —not even suffering a full explosion but just simple circuitry overload and fire which is quickly contained. Surely you admit that exploding consoles are simply ridiculous from any standpoint.
Let's say Roger Ebert is completely ignorant of how electricity works on any technical level. In the real world, he's never seen a control console or any electrical appliance explode because of an overload. Nobody ever has. He knows it's bullshit even if he doesn't know exactly why it's bullshit.
On the other hand, it does help to explain his dislike of digital film. He obviously can't understand basic electrical laws, much less digital photography.
Hasty Generalisation fallacy. The people who don't like digital film/photography feel so because it doesn't have the "look" of standard film media. The technology has improved considerably in just the four years since I shopped for my last camera, but I can tell you that most professionals will
still prefer standard film over digital, because the technology has yet to improve to the point where you can get the same depth-of-field quality. It's definitely improving, but the technology is far from perfected.
Overall, I think you were a little hard on the man.