Durlan!For instance there was a picture posted online a while back of an orange alien with antenna, that a lot of people thought could be an Andorian.
Me too and when I refer to grit I mean in the storytelling and characters. The show will be clean Trek, they won't change that. The Klingons will probably get a drastic makeover. Their ship and costuming is iconic but open to more interpretation.Why does everyone want grit in the future?
I appreciate the sleek, clean, minimalist aesthetic of TOS and Forbidden Planet, as it reflects the types of designs that were common in real life at the time. Mad Men has made this kind of interior design popular again. Make Discovery's interiors look like Mad Men in space.
Keep the gritty, grungy, worn-out look in Star Wars, where it belongs.
Kor
Why does everyone want grit in the future?
I appreciate the sleek, clean, minimalist aesthetic of TOS and Forbidden Planet, as it reflects the types of designs that were common in real life at the time. Mad Men has made this kind of interior design popular again. Make Discovery's interiors look like Mad Men in space.
Keep the gritty, grungy, worn-out look in Star Wars, where it belongs.
Kor
I totally agree with this!!! In fact, one of my misgivings about setting it before TOS is that our vision of future tech is far different from TOS. How do you update TOS' setting without it feeling too retro? And yet, as I've thought about it over the last few months it could be done if folks are creative. For example, make the communicators like cell phones - put a screen under the cover and give it apps. You don't really break continuity with TOS......much.
But fundamentally I think the future should look like the future - and technology doesn't get bulkier and rougher looking as time goes on, it gets sleeker. I think the gritty aesthetic is popular because it's easy. But in context it only works in something post apocalyptic like Mad Max or Fallout.
Someplace Star Trek can go back to a sleek future is the communicator. Go to a wrist communicator design that basically looks like a razor thin wristband, but with a touchscreen all the way around. Have it interface with the user via VR, hud, vibration, audio, and text. Have it pull data from sensors in the uniform, and it replaces the tricorder as well. That can then build toward a holodeck recreation of an away team's situation organically without adding strange headwear or glasses. It would still look like Trek, but the functionality is a lot closer to our vision of the future.
I don't have an issue with a "visual reboot" of aliens. In fact, outside of Klingons, Star Trek has done that countless times. Andorians, Tellarites, Bolians, Cardassians, Gorn, Tiburonians, you name it.
Here you go.Fans will of course be able to -if they so desire- point to Enterprise's time war, First Contact's temporal incursion and even wibbly-wobbly rippling effects of the Kelvin timeline split to explain any changes. Of course, that will lead to years-long debates over what constitutes "prime" universe Trek.
*inserts Brace Yourselves meme*
I know that we as viewers expect sci fi tech to look more like the touchscreen devices that are so common now at the consumer level. And it certainly looks cool.
But one thing to consider is that real-life military equipment is a lot less flashy, and each device is durable and robust and serves a single purpose, rather than being a delicate and finicky multi-tasking computer like our consumer-level tablets and cell phones. I can definitely picture the TOS tricorders and communicators being part of that kind of no-nonsense military tech design lineage.
I would certainly hate it if I needed to contact my starship for an emergency beam-out, but I couldn't even make the call and ended up getting eaten by a monster because Angry Birds or Snapchat were freezing up again on my communicator/tricorder/tablet thing.
Kor
Military Tech is getting touch screens, the F35's Cockpit is basically one giant Touch Screen.
One problem with newer tech is its often smaller and less visually impressive on screen. Holographic tech will need to exist in some form since VR is an emerging tech even now.
My old roommate would get furious when Data typed. He would say they could just plug him in, it's so inefficient. But it looked good on screen.
I'm not so sure. I think we are in for more of a change than we realize. In fact I think many of us fans are about to be dragged kicking and screaming into the "real" 23rd century. But even if it looks like the old, I'll be happy as long as story and character are solid.That could also be explained by his desire to be more human.
I seriously doubt Discovery will introduce anything revolutionary in terms of tech. I'd love to once again see a Star Trek series that did, though.
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