• 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!

Let's talk about the elephant in the room, this series violates Roddenberry's vision big time

His vision wasn't so developed during TOS. it marinated for the 15 years he did the convention circuit after TOS had wrapped.

TNG solidified the entire "Human had evolved" idea. but in TOS their still pretty normal rational humans as we know them. I don't see DSC very far off that.
 
Let's talk about the elephant in the room, this series violates Roddenberry's vision big time

Bullcrap.

Discovery is perfectly in line with TOS*, DS9, VOY, and ENT as far as the way it depicts its characters and the ways in which they interact with one another and with the world(s) around them.

TNG is actually the outlier here in that it presented a future that was TOO perfect.

* And I say this as someone who hasn't even watched all that much TOS
 
Especially on the 3rd episode most characters, even the leads are often depicted as extremely cranky like a regular crime show on any regular tv script. Roddenberry's vision is not a fixation, it's what genuinely made TNG a phenomenon.

I disagree. "Roddenberry's vision" is what held TNG back from being an even more impactful and memorable sci-fi drama than it already was. It's why, over time by my re-watching...DS9 and ENT have both surpassed it in my book.

I'm glad we're not getting another TNG clone. The franchise needed to do something different than try to emulate the template of a 30-year old show.
 
Gene is dead, times have changed, it's a new show for new people and leftovers like me.

I don't say that without sympathy but,

if TNG was the "vision" Gene had ( though I know that's debatable, just saying for sake of argument ) and that's what you like, then just go back and rewatch that.

At some point Trek has to stop chasing and try something new, and this is at least "newish" if not entirely new, but at least it aint chasing TNG.

And when I get the TNG fix, i'll just go put that on play.
 
While this series so far has gone against the grain of what we know as episodic Star Trek, as well as some of the setting and characters not being what we're used to, it has some elements of what we do know as Star Trek.

"Roddenberry's Vision" was something fed to him by hangers-on and yes people, telling him about this bright, utopian future he created. It's more made up by those around him than Roddenberry himself, and it manifested itself in TNG, where everyone was perfect and not realistic.
 
This is set before TOS, which had none of that "Roddenberry's vision" nonsense.

Thank goodness.

On a purely logical note.

Gene's vision was of this particular future society.

do we really think Gene's vision of this society would be this drastically different, just a small amount of years earlier? I think it's safe to say if we were purely following the logic, there "would" be the expectation that the Federation is a fair bit similar if only separated by a few years.
 
On a purely logical note.

Gene's vision was of this particular future society.

do we really think Gene's vision of this society would be this drastically different, just a small amount of years earlier? I think it's safe to say if we were purely following the logic, there "would" be the expectation that the Federation is a fair bit similar if only separated by a few years.
TOS had examples of racist Starfleet characters. Come STVI, Gene hated the idea of Kirk and other Starfleet officers being racist against Klingons because he'd decided in the 20 years inbetween that his future humans were beyond all that.

His vision of the future changed.
 
"Golly gee willakers I sure am happy I got thrown into this devastating interstallar war" -Coppershirt

"Me too! I am content that my peace-time scientific work was preempted and I was separated from the colleagues I worked closely with so I can make some kind of weapon for them." -Silver Shirt

"As a prisoner I am just mildly pleased to be shamed, incarcerated and showing all sorts of emotions as i am treated like a gentle flower by the head of security." -Mustard Jumpsuit

"Well my eyes have a problem with light transitions, so maybe we're trading potshots in another TNG type war we'll only hear casually mentioned but clearly had few reprocussions.. like the Tzenkethi.. who were they again? Where was I.. I just like that it is perfectly lit in here in a way that pleases everyone. Not too bright not too dark, no harsh transitions. Plenty of earth tones and low pile carpet. And the ship glows outside so space is lit up like a 100 watt bulb in a closet. Fortune cookie, anyone?" -Gold Shirt

"I'm just glad we could make sure our ship design managed to fit every imaginary design criteria from 50 years worth the fan expectations. Not to be meta but if I had dissapointed the Trekyard fellas I'd just go all 'Shaka when the walls fell'" -Free floating prison shuttle pilot.

"Yes dear crew, now all is all is well. Now let's go transport some ambassadors around and polish our horga'hns!" -Greek Chorus
 
Honestly, I find it more rewarding when Starfleet officers have to fight their way through the imoral to uphold their ideals. I think this will be a story abotu Michael redeeming herself, and her Starfleet ideals, and it will be so much more meaning ful that she does it with a captain like Lorca.
 
I disagree. "Roddenberry's vision" is what held TNG back from being an even more impactful and memorable sci-fi drama than it already was. It's why, over time by my re-watching...DS9 and ENT have both surpassed it in my book.

I'm glad we're not getting another TNG clone. The franchise needed to do something different than try to emulate the template of a 30-year old show.

Agreed. I *love* TNG (and our man Gene), but IMO it succeeded in spite of some of Roddenberry's edicts.

Discovery presents an opportunity to see how some deeply flawed but perhaps idealistic people strive to do better, against the impossible. That's a more compelling storytelling environment, IMO.
 
Especially on the 3rd episode most characters, even the leads are often depicted as extremely cranky like a regular crime show on any regular tv script. Roddenberry's vision is not a fixation, it's what genuinely made TNG a phenomenon.

I agree and it's already turning fans away from even watching this iteration of "Star Trek" any further. In the previous Trek series the nature of the characters created a distinct impression that we were watching people from the far future, in this Trek I'm seeing same boring characters that surround us in 2017.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top