He also wrote great Samurai movies and a snappy musical.My favorite Science Fiction author.
He also wrote great Samurai movies and a snappy musical.My favorite Science Fiction author.
Versatile.He also wrote great Samurai movies and a snappy musical.
In what reality?? Seriously??If Burnham is the yardstick for heroics then standards improved.
In what reality?? Seriously??
TOS.In what reality?? Seriously??
Good. It's one thing this show has going for it.Let's talk about the elephant in the room, this series violates Roddenberry's vision big time
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.
You want to talk about credit where credit is due? Gene L Coon. He's the one who did the heavy lifting of producing TOS and is responsible for developing Roddenberry's ideas into an actual TV show, not to mention creating many of the things now considered pillars of Star Trek, like the Federation, Starfleet and the Klingons.Who was the creator of TOS? Who pitched the idea? Come on, credit where credit is due.
That's not really his fault. The show's production staff essentially prodded and pestered him to become associated with the show so that could have the "prestige" of association with the Roddenberry family. What was Rod supposed to do, turn away free money on principal? Would you do that, were you in his position?On a related note, does anyone else think it's a bit tragic that his grown son has recently come crawling out of the woodwork to cash in on Star Trek? What is his actual contribution to Discovery?
My bad, came late to the party..That's already been brought up a few times in this thread.
You're all wrong. Roddenberry's vision came from the original source...
FORBIDDEN PLANET!
You have something against "Love Instructors"?The Star Trek Motion Picture novelization's depiction of how Roddenberry REALLY wanted 23rd century folk is HILARIOUS.
Why bring up 1987 and TNG again?
Older TOS fans aren't 'ungrateful' - we just KNOW that the whole:Amazing how ungrateful fans react to the mere mention of Gene's vision, lol. Like any of this would have resulted if he didn't have that vision. Given Discovery is set ten years before TOS one would think it would have a passing compatibility to the creation that was.. Star Trek.
You have something against "Love Instructors"?![]()
He was a visionary-imaging the Internet comment section years beforeI’m sure like many newbies, he just felt the compulsive need to post his feelings and then not bother to respond to any replies.
Wearing blinders can be fun!
Robert Heinlein.Who was the creator of TOS? Who pitched the idea? Come on, credit where credit is due.
I think someone said it best with, "Enterprise is when they had the possibility of radically changing the formula around so their first instinct was to make it as generically Star Trek as possible."
I don't think so....
Yep, working for redemption isn't a bad thing
I still maintain the biggest mistake that the writers of DS9 made was turning Dukat into PURE EVIL!!! because too many fans liked him as an antihero. They should have given him Damar's arc over the last two seasons. In my mind there's nothing more Trek than saying there are no monsters, just people - and that every person has the ability to improve themselves.
Eh, there's an if and an and and a butt there. Gul Dukat is a Space Nazi who had work camps, forced women into sexual slavery, had his rival's child abandoned on Bajor, and was a raging monster. The thing was, he wasn't AS evil as some Cardassians because he didn't believe in the racial purity angle and just was a sleazy self-interested snake. He was an irredeemable monster who just had a love for his daughter and a charming personality.
That he was the guy who founded a cult to himself is entirely in character.
Giving that guy "redemption" is hard because it's hard to imagine Gul Dukat would ever see himself having done anything wrong in the first place.
As I said, arguing some people are just pure irredeemable evil doesn't fit with the Trekkian vision of the world at all. There are of course antagonists, but often they are misunderstood, or merely acting out their own agendas, rather than being purely malevolent. DS9 was the smartest of the Trek series in many ways, and turning Dukat from the most complex antagonist in all of Trek into a mustache-twirling caricature of himself was a huge misfire. - one which from everything I read was the writers purposely sabotaging the character because too many fans liked him and rationalized his bad behavior.
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