Nog isn't human, and just so happens to be a member of one of the few races that have pretty much unknown neurological structures.
So, out of five examples, you've refuted one based on them not being human.
Bravo...
Nog isn't human, and just so happens to be a member of one of the few races that have pretty much unknown neurological structures.
With regard to Picard, the fact Starfleet just put him back out there after the events in TNG episodes:You're still kinda missing the point that the show is being made for a 21st century audience. As long as war and various other traumas exist, so will PTSD.
I'd say Kirk was dealing with PTSD in the episode "Obsession". And they didn't seem to do anything for Picard after "Chain of Command", except have him talk to a therapist.
No it's not.
After all, in Trek you can fix PTSD with outpatient medical procedures to correct the neurological damage causing the problem.
Oh, yeah, good one! "Wounded," indeed. O'Brien, too, for that matter, though not nearly that bad.I'd also say that Ben Maxwell from "The Wounded", was obviously suffering from PTSD.
Oh, yeah, good one! "Wounded," indeed. O'Brien, too, for that matter, though not nearly that bad.
Roddenberry's vizhun.Pike's early malaise after losing several crewmembers at Rigel VII could also be PTSD.
Into Darkness is the highest grossing Trek movie ever. So I say there is room for dark-and-gritty.
I wouldn't call any of the Kelvin Universe movies, dark-and-gritty.
With regard to Picard, the fact Starfleet just put him back out there after the events in TNG episodes:
"Best of Both Worlds" (Fully assimilated by the Borg and as Locutus DESTROYS 40+ Federation ships. So, yeah, he took a week off with his Brother and all is well after a fight in the Vineyard.)
"The Inner Light" (Yes, 22 minutes of real time passed - but for Picard, he had lived 70+ years in that other life. So, yeah, IMO he would have practically forgotten HOW to command a Starship. Yet - all is well, and he somehow has the full knowledge of the years, with no ill effects. You'd think a race with THAT level of tech - to easily penetrate alien shields and rewrite an alien brain, could have figured out how to have some leave their dying planet. To this day, I fail to see why many LOVE tjhis episode as "the best of Trek". It could have easily been a better Twilight Zone or Outer Limits episode because it was more an anthology episode that a Star Trek episode.)
"Chain of Command" (Boy, Picard must have A LOT of enemies at Starfleet Command because I'm sorry but saying he's the ONLY ONE in the entire Federation that can determine if the Cardassians have a Biogenic weapon; and making him a team of 3 to infiltrate a possible fuly operation Cardassian military base??<-- But yeah, past that, he was tortured for weeks, and once released Starfleet puts him right back in the Captain's chair.)
And then there's the absolutely incredible instance of the Nomad probe wiping Lt. Uhura's mind completely blank and Dr. McCoy and Nurse Chapel having to reeducate her from scratch using the Enterprise's library computer records. Which begs the question: if you can have your mind wiped so thoroughly that you're effectively a child again and be reeducated and retrained so quickly that you're fully retrained and back to normal by the next episode....what's the point of having Starfleet Academy?
Khan beat the shit out of Kirk, broke Carol Marcus' leg and crushed Admiral Marcus skull in the span of two minutes. The death toll from the film is easily in the thousands. Scotty blew one dude out an airlock. We saw people being sucked out into space when the Enterprise was attacked. There was the early attack on the Daystrom facility. Khan murdered about a dozen Klingons.
That is pretty dark-and-gritty to me.
But there were jokes! You can't have dark and gritty when there are jokes!Khan beat the shit out of Kirk, broke Carol Marcus' leg and crushed Admiral Marcus skull in the span of two minutes. The death toll from the film is easily in the thousands. Scotty blew one dude out an airlock. We saw people being sucked out into space when the Enterprise was attacked. There was the early attack on the Daystrom facility. Khan murdered about a dozen Klingons.
That is pretty dark-and-gritty to me.
Khan beat the shit out of Kirk, broke Carol Marcus' leg and crushed Admiral Marcus skull in the span of two minutes. The death toll from the film is easily in the thousands. Scotty blew one dude out an airlock. We saw people being sucked out into space when the Enterprise was attacked. There was the early attack on the Daystrom facility. Khan murdered about a dozen Klingons.
That is pretty dark-and-gritty to me.
Rating doesn't mean something is or isn't dark and gritty. I cite Batman: The Animated Series as an example. The rating for that cartoon was PG. Yet the overall theme of the series was very dark, gritty, and focused on the dramatic. Rating means bupkis when it comes to whether or not something is considered dark and gritty.All that stuff seems pretty much the norm for PG-13. Most of the death is off screen or aliens, who don't count in some regards because aliens don't exist in real life. It's one of the reasons why on "Stargate" they could kill G'ould and Jaffa like it was nothing but you don't see many humans being killed by humans. Alien life doesn't matter to censors I suspect. Marcus got his skull crushed off screen as well and the scene is played all of Carol's scream and reaction. Then you bring in the fact that Trek uses ray guns, instead of real world guns which also makes the violence seem more tame.
Jason
Rating doesn't mean something is or isn't dark and gritty. I cite Batman: The Animated Series as an example. The rating for that cartoon was PG. Yet the overall theme of the series was very dark, gritty, and focused on the dramatic. Rating means bupkis when it comes to whether or not something is considered dark and gritty.
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