Trainees, actually.Weren't they referred to as cadets before it was revealed that they were kids?
Trainees, actually.Weren't they referred to as cadets before it was revealed that they were kids?
True, but I think they're some sort of weird cult. The official position of the Klingon Empire as reflected in the 2151 addendums to the Geneva Conventions may reflect what we've known previously - no need to return bodies of the deceased, no special considerations for them, etc.Klingons in Discovery don't seem to have that attitude.
But what really strikes me about Star Trek fans who prefer The Orville to Discovery because the latter is too dark: they weren't paying attention during this episode. THIS is dark.
But what really strikes me about Star Trek fans who prefer The Orville to Discovery because the latter is too dark: they weren't paying attention during this episode. THIS is dark. Frying the adult Krill to a crisp instead of incapacitating them. Thinking they've done the kids a favour by keeping them alive, when they've guaranteed those kids will hate the Union forever, and also possibly guaranteed that the Krill kids will live their while lives on Alpha Guantanamo IV. Not to mention how much Mercer will second guess himself the next time he confronts the Krill in a battle situation: how many kids will he kill? ...
To me the point is that this episode was dark, but the series isn't. Too much modern science fiction feels the need to always be dark (and/or action-packed and/or full of stuff you have to be a die-hard fan to understand). This series returns to one of the foundations of Trek: an anthology series with continuing characters. Individual episodes are as dark, or funny, or thought-provoking as befits the plot.What if a regular Trek episode from TNG, DS9, etc had featured a priest stabbing a severed head repeatedly? They would have felt far darker than this Krill episode of The Orville felt. Even though the episode didn't have an idealized happy ending, we know that the next episode can still start off bright and humorous, without a pall in the air.
Get Smart is a good comparison for this episode since it involved bumbling secret agents. But overall it doesn't work, as Get Smart wasn't really comedy and drama, it was pure comedy, and it was hilarious.Before the show came on the air, they compared the mixture of comedy and drama to M*A*S*H, but I think I've settled on Get Smart as a better comparison.
The best science fiction show since Enterprise? I agree it's more or less comparable with Enterprise, which puts it well below Doctor Who, The Expanse, Black Mirror, Discovery, etc etc.
But what really strikes me about Star Trek fans who prefer The Orville to Discovery because the latter is too dark: they weren't paying attention during this episode. THIS is dark. Frying the adult Krill to a crisp instead of incapacitating them. Thinking they've done the kids a favour by keeping them alive, when they've guaranteed those kids will hate the Union forever, and also possibly guaranteed that the Krill kids will live their while lives on Alpha Guantanamo IV. Not to mention how much Mercer will second guess himself the next time he confronts the Krill in a battle situation: how many kids will he kill?
It may be that the show will just move along and ignore all that, but if it does so, that completely undercuts this story.
The Expanse is a silly show about people working the mines in the far future, as soon as I heard of that premise I gave up on it, there should be a limit on the silliness that is allowed in Sci Fi.
Well in the first episode there's an indication of a disenfranchised group of asteroid miners that live out their lives on the asteroids. That's all I need to know about this show.
You don't?Well, yeah. If that episode was any indication, the holy war had already been declared for their previous skirmishes alone. Why would they notify a soulless creature that they've declared a holy war on it? I don't warn my computer before I start hitting it with a hammer when it angers me.
Apparently not.Can't it be both?
The Orville is already consistently scoring higher than Discovery on episode by episode basis. The Expanse is a silly show about people working the mines in the far future, as soon as I heard of that premise I gave up on it, there should be a limit on the silliness that is allowed in Sci Fi. The Black Mirror is good but too dark and depressing. Doctor Who - I don't know, couldn't get into it past a few episodes. Therefore, yes, The Orville is so far the best Sci Fi show since ST: Enterprise.
Earth is the seat of The Planetary Union a major "galactic superpower," who says it's not already pretty well known where Earth is? I think not knowing where it is would be like not knowing where the UN building is.
And pointing to some point in celestial "sky" and saying "you can't see our sun between these two stars, but it's there, and our planet is around it!" is hardly giving someone the information they need to be able to navigate to some destination with any accuracy not to mention, I presume, it'd be pretty easy for someone (especially a kid) to get disoriented and forget where it is, all that'd have to happen is the ship spins to some random point any any of the three axial points of rotation and you'd be completely disoriented without a lot of training and knowledge to find constellations or other "markers" to reorient and find the destination which, again, is "a point you can't see between these two points."
The Expanse is a silly show about people working the mines in the far future, as soon as I heard of that premise I gave up on it, there should be a limit on the silliness that is allowed in Sci Fi.
That is, quite literally, one of the most inaccurate descriptions of a TV show, movie, or book I have ever seen.The Expanse is a silly show about people working the mines in the far future, as soon as I heard of that premise I gave up on it, there should be a limit on the silliness that is allowed in Sci Fi.
Interestingly, the disparity is reversed with Discovery. The critic score is 89% but the audience score is 59%.
True, but I think it's probably the closest comparison that there is-- not that it really needs to be compared to anything.Get Smart is a good comparison for this episode since it involved bumbling secret agents. But overall it doesn't work, as Get Smart wasn't really comedy and drama, it was pure comedy, and it was hilarious.
That is, quite literally, one of the most inaccurate descriptions of a TV show, movie, or book I have ever seen.
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