Sounds like you were watching a different show than I. The Discovery episode I watched had lots of complex drama and interactions, consequences, realizations, dilemmas, and so on.Pretty much, yeah.
More to the point: a war story line justifies every stray bit of on-screen cruelty, character self-centeredness and cynicism that the managers of this show feel they need to put on display to convince themselves and their studio bosses that they're wearing the creative "big people pants" on a premium off-network drama.
The main issue with the episode was just TOO MUCH. Trek should have at most an A/B plot structure. This episode had an A/B/C/D/E structure:
A. Conflict between Stamets and Lorca's extremes
B. Exploration of the space Tartigrade
C. Struggle to save Federation's dilithium reserves
D. Burnham's struggle to open the box from Georgiou
E. Klingon crap.
It's just way too much. IMHO the last two plotlines should have been dropped entirely.
Does that mean we can milk it?Considering that nipple clamps allow an extremophile to navigate the spore drive. Imagine what a gag ball can accomplish. Every episode will add another kinky pain device.
I think A/B plot structures work with shows that are largely episodic. Most drama on tv in the last 17 years has become more serialised with many characters and plot threads (Game of Thrones, Battlestar Galactica and Lost for example). People have come to expect A/B/C/D/E type storytelling in tv dramas so I think the creators of Discovery are just following the trend.
The main issue with the episode was just TOO MUCH. Trek should have at most an A/B plot structure. This episode had an A/B/C/D/E structure:
A. Conflict between Stamets and Lorca's extremes
B. Exploration of the space Tartigrade
C. Struggle to save Federation's dilithium reserves
D. Burnham's struggle to open the box from Georgiou
E. Klingon crap.
It's just way too much. IMHO the last two plotlines should have been dropped entirely.
I don't agree with this criticism at all. You could say this about nearly every Star Trek episode if you really tried.
I'll use very well-known and well -liked episodes as examples
Yesterday's Enterprise
A. Anomaly causes Enterprise C appearance and timeline shift
B. Tasha's presence perceived as wrong or unnatural
C. Tasha's relationship with Castillo
D. Picard's moral dilemma
E. Klingon crap
City On The Edge
A. McCoy's well being/sanity at risk, rescue mission ensues
B. Investigate the mysteries of The Guardian
C. Timeline contaminated- must fix
D. Kirk lovestory crap
E. Fish-out-of-water survival and blend-in in 1930s
Best of Both Worlds 1
A. Mystery of changed Borg priorities
B. Update to Starfleet capabilities and prep for an inevitable conflict
C. Shelby vs Riker crap / Riker career and defining moment stuff
D. Picard kidnapped and rescue plan
E. Strategy and tension around defending sector 001
None of this is "too much." It's just fully integrated elements of a relatively involved story.
Exactly like the last DSC episode.
I don't agree with this criticism at all. You could say this about nearly every Star Trek episode if you really tried.
I'll use very well-known and well -liked episodes as examples
Yesterday's Enterprise
A. Anomaly causes Enterprise C appearance and timeline shift
B. Tasha's presence perceived as wrong or unnatural
C. Tasha's relationship with Castillo
D. Picard's moral dilemma
E. Klingon crap
City On The Edge
A. McCoy's well being/sanity at risk, rescue mission ensues
B. Investigate the mysteries of The Guardian
C. Timeline contaminated- must fix
D. Kirk lovestory crap
E. Fish-out-of-water survival and blend-in in 1930s
Best of Both Worlds 1
A. Mystery of changed Borg priorities
B. Update to Starfleet capabilities and prep for an inevitable conflict
C. Shelby vs Riker crap / Riker career and defining moment stuff
D. Picard kidnapped and rescue plan
E. Strategy and tension around defending sector 001
None of this is "too much." It's just fully integrated elements of a relatively involved story.
Exactly like the last DSC episode.
They are cramming a lot into the episode. It feels rushed. Running, fighting. Even in those 3 episodes you mentioned things progressed slower where the characters could chill and have some good conversations. More emphasis on character development and less emphasis on action sequences.
It's a shame. I'd prefer Trek go in the opposite direction, and lose the "B plot" entirely. Basically every superb Trek episode lacked a B plot. Often the cast members not involved in the primary plot are given a few token scenes for credits, but really their scenes add nothing to the show. It would be better if they were ditched entirely, and each episode focuses on only the cast members needed to further the core story of the week along.
Maybe you have gotten to see an episode more than the rest of us, but Michal didn't "try to get people" to treat it humanely - I think she will try to do so in episode 5. What she did was try to get people to examine it not from the perspective that it must be a killing machine due to its outward appearance and actions on the Glenn, but from a position of analyzing it dispassionately for what it actually is. And at no point, so far, has she advocated anything to the determent of the miners or others....Overall, I enjoyed the episode but I have to say I couldn't really completely identify with Michael's position. Michael shows tremendous compassion to the Space Pig and tries to get people to treat it humanely but there are thousands of innocent people dying at the dilithium mining colony. I felt their pain was underemphasized in the situation. Sort of like when Captain Picard was more interested in the Crystaline Entity's health than the colonies it'd destroyed. To say I'm mad about the treatment of the Klingons in the show is understatement, though. They can be monsters or changed in appearance but they must always be competent.
6/10
...Federation is apparently full of incompetent nitwits. (These strategic mines that deliver half of our fuel? Let’s leave them unprotected. Also, make sure that any Federation ships are at least a few days away!)
but then i realized that putting the water bear in the machine was anathema of starfleet principals full stop. there’s no debate about exploiting an animal for the greater good. we already know it’s wrong now and it should be especially egregious in the star trek universe. there’s no way to make this ok. it just falls apart from that point on. it’s low hanging fruit and emotionally manipulative story-wise and boxes these characters in... if burnham learns her lesson or comes to realize the error of her actions here next week or the week after that, it still leaves the ugly question of why she and lorca and landry did what they did in the first place.
...Tilly changed her attitude towards Burnham only because now she sees her as someone who can help further her own career.
Welcome to the board....
I do think that the show is sacrificing narrative in order to be mroe action packed (looks to me some things are not well thought-after, like the defense on Corvan 2 or how many ships got at T'Kuvma's ship within hours from both the Klingon and Federation side)...
Pretty much, yeah.
More to the point: a war story line justifies every stray bit of on-screen cruelty, character self-centeredness and cynicism that the managers of this show feel they need to put on display to convince themselves and their studio bosses that they're wearing the creative "big people pants" on a premium off-network drama.
What a shocking revelation. I thought for sure my example would suddenly make you realize how biased and incorrect you were.I don't see the similarity at all.
The AV Club nailed them.
HereHow many action sequences were there? I know Trek fans in general struggle with this, but any sequence taking place outside the ready room and lacking tea drinking isn't automatically an "action scene"
Some of this shit is really funny. There's another guy just pages back complaining about too much hoopla with developing the characters.
Can't please everyone, I guess. No better example than passionate fandoms.
Here
1) replicating a uniform making it look like the intro to Matrix Reloaded
2) klingon battle simulation on the bridge
3) teleporting by a sun then trying to avoid destruction there
4) hearing the audio broadcasts being played shipwide from the place being attacked by the klingons
5) security lady fighting the creature
6) teleporting into a battle with the klingons, fire raining on the planet after the battle
Here
1) replicating a uniform making it look like the intro to Matrix Reloaded
2) klingon battle simulation on the bridge
3) teleporting by a sun then trying to avoid destruction there
4) hearing the audio broadcasts being played shipwide from the place being attacked by the klingons
5) security lady fighting the creature
6) teleporting into a battle with the klingons, fire raining on the planet after the battle
i have no doubt the ramifications of this will carry forward in future episodes and i'm confident burnham will decide it's unethical to use the tardigrade the way they did. but i find it hard to believe that she would act like this in the first place, even hastily.First of all, just putting the animal in the machine isn't immoral in itself. Yeah, putting it in there without knowing what would happen isn't the most ethical approach, but working within the timeframe they had, they didn't have time to work on all the options. Given Burnham's clear response to the events, it seems definite that she will be bringing the ethics of the situation up with rest of the crew shortly. I can't see where you have cause to trash Burnham for this; it was happening for the first time and she alone seemed to be aware of and affected by it. She is the last person to blame for this.
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