• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Discovery in Variety

There's no pushback, 3 or 4 people are giving their opinion and it doesn't agree with the general perception or reality. I'm fine with that, but I'm going to bring some sense to the proceedings. Its what I do.

RAMA
So do I. If you were to stop short of proclaiming yourself an authority on judging quality production design and merely profess your opinion then this thread would not be teetering on the verge of a flamewar. But if you really want to go there you're gonna get pushback because the art is, objectively speaking, not that good. And it doesn't take an art education to know it. People have been scratching their heads over Discovery's look and feel ever since the USS Discovery teaser and that WTF sensation has continued as more and more of this stuff has been revealed. Glitzy, yes. High-budget, yes. High quality art? No. And it's not just wrapped up in canon purity. Taken out of context of Trek it's just not that good. Mediocre at best.

If you want to prove the error of our ways, explain what it is we're not seeing, but responding with insults won't move the needle, which is why you're effectively commandeering and spamming this thread.
 
Or take the arch on the D bridge, with all the things arches have symbolized throughout history. It's a gateway to the unknown. Or a rebirth (which TNG was). But there's also the Kafkaesque idea that represents "another way," which is Picard in a nutshell, where the arch links the tactician, firm hand who's literally on his right with the pacifist negotiator who's literally on his left.

This is a great bit of thinking about why the Enterprise D bridge worked aesthetically.
 
This is a great bit of thinking about why the Enterprise D bridge worked aesthetically.
Yes, @CorporalClegg's idea is very interesting.

The only other explication of "the arch" on the TNG bridge that I'm familiar with is, as someone pointed out to me once, that Worf's/Yar's station is located on what amounts to a re-imagining of the four-part "railing" of the TOS bridge. That observation doesn't directly indicate thematic elements, although some might be inferred from the contrast between the two bridges.
 
Futuristic and functional. Like someone actually thought through something for the 21st century, not mimicing a 1960's design for the umpteenth time.

Though I always wanted a Mass Effect TV series, instead of going to the Trek well yet again.
It's interesting how early bridge criticisms said this looked like Mass Effect. Hell, I love the Mass Effect design. Onwards and upwards.
 
Yes, @CorporalClegg's idea is very interesting.

The only other explication of "the arch" on the TNG bridge that I'm familiar with is, as someone pointed out to me once, that Worf's/Yar's station is located on what amounts to a re-imagining of the four-part "railing" of the TOS bridge. That observation doesn't directly indicate thematic elements, although some might be inferred from the contrast between the two bridges.
Yes. I think the "arch rail" in TNG is definitely meant to reflect the look of the rail around the well of the TOS bridge, not in functionality, but in form.
 
FB_IMG_1504904902580.jpg

Ted Sullivan's twitter

Look: core A and B

Shenzhou is not dead yet..
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top