I'm really being repelled by over photo-shopped images with the colors pumped up to the comix level. The camera does not see as much as the eye can see, and such abstracting of elements points up the limitations of photography, and not the strengths. What usually happens is that the processor, in an attempt to be "creative", makes the photo look like every other photo that was so enhanced. I confess to adding a little contrast here, a little saturation there; but I'm mostly interested in getting the photo to look like what I saw that caught my eye. It's true that gimmicks were used in the darkroom as well, but never without calling attention to themselves. I suppose extreme photo-shopping is best for advertising, where one might be compelled to change the color of the subject's tie, etc.
What Coleridge said of poetry seems to apply here: we are not in the business of creating "fancy", but are instead out to have our imagination penetrate what is there in front of us in a way that makes it fresh, as if seen for the first time. Other opinions are called for.
Example: http://dgrin.smugmug.com/photos/380513149_TXMjT-L.jpg