One Aging Geek

Monday, June 20, 2005

Turn On, Tune In, Veg Out - New York Times

In contrast, it seems, to a lot of geeks I'm not a big fan of Neal Stephenson's writings. I find his stuff mostly derivative. But this bit is pretty interesting.

Turn On, Tune In, Veg Out - New York Times: "The first 'Star Wars' movie 28 years ago was distinguished by healthy interplay between veg and geek scenes. In the climactic sequence, where rebel fighters attacked the Death Star, we repeatedly cut away from the dogfights and strafing runs - the purest kind of vegging-out material - to hushed command bunkers where people stood around pondering computer displays, geeking out on the strategic progress of the battle.

All such content - as well as the long, beautiful, uncluttered shots of desert, sky, jungle and mountain that filled the early episodes - was banished in the first of the prequels ('Episode I: The Phantom Menace,' 1999). In the 16 years that separated it from the initial trilogy, a new universe of ancillary media had come into existence. These had made it possible to take the geek material offline so that the movies could consist of pure, uncut veg-out content, steeped in day-care-center ambience. These newer films don't even pretend to tell the whole story; they are akin to PowerPoint presentations that summarize the main bullet points from a much more comprehensive body of work developed by and for a geek subculture."