I'm still upset that Star Trek has never explained why transporter effects always look different in shows and movies. Like, why did DS9 and VOY have totally different effects for Starfleet? Aren't they in the same time period?
Thanks a lot, Obama™!
I'm still upset that Star Trek has never explained why transporter effects always look different in shows and movies. Like, why did DS9 and VOY have totally different effects for Starfleet? Aren't they in the same time period?
Nope. NARRATIVE is part of world building. Art design serves to provide visual impact to the narrative.I don't expect exactness. But the art design is part of the world building
Sure he can. All he has to do is justify it in the narrative. Good example: "Lawnmower Man" establishes its timeframe as one of those "five minutes into the future" stories where a new revolution in modern-day (for the 1980s) virtual reality accidentally creates a monster. Lawnmower Man 2 leaps slightly farther into the future (a year or two maybe?) and shows the world has devolved into a distopian hellscape where people use VR as a form of escapism.If a creator decides to set a story in a world with characteristic X, that author can't then portray characteristic X as significantly other than X and still expect the audience to maintain immersion in the story.
I would imagine that a writer who states that the main character has horns, orange skin, tufts of purple fur and three fingered hands would likely influence at least some of the choices made by the makeup designers.And this is my daily reminder that a lot of the toxic attitudes in Trek fandom is actually born from ignorance...
You do realize that writers have absolutely NO control over makeup design, right?
Haven't watched Bond sinceWhich, apart from art design, it completely is.
The question is: why would you expect the ART DESIGN to be exactly the same, especially when they're not even telling the same story? This is like being mad about Roger Moore and Sean Connery having different hair colors.
It is toxic to accuse the writers and production teams of being lazy or incompetent just because we don't agree with design choices, which I believe was @Crazy Eddie's overall point.It's not being "toxic" to be part of a "tiny minority" of Trek fans(which I don't buy, by the way) that would like to see diversity in the species now that the differences have been set in canon.
The phasers keep changing colour too! It's almost as of their consoles have RGB sliders and sparkle FX controls.I'm still upset that Star Trek has never explained why transporter effects always look different in shows and movies. Like, why did DS9 and VOY have totally different effects for Starfleet? Aren't they in the same time period?
When Star Trek Online first launched you can change you weapon colour using a chat command, but Cryptic removed it shortly after.The phasers keep changing colour too! It's almost as of their consoles have RGB sliders and sparkle FX controls.
I haven't accussed them of being 'lazy' - I've accussed them of being dishonest when they say - "It's the Prime Timeline of Kirk/Spock/TOS...no it's not a retcon or a reboot.." <--- Which is what the production leads were saying. Given the major redesign of the 1701 (again, the original look of the Starship/Constitution Class was used as recently as 2005 in ENT - "In a Mirror Darkly") for this production IMO that claim that it's not a retcon or reboot doesn't hold up. <--- I just wish they'd be honest and finally admit that, but that's me.Haven't watched Bond since
It is toxic to accuse the writers and production teams of being lazy or incompetent just because we don't agree with design choices, which I believe was @Crazy Eddie's overall point.
What would them admitting it accomplish, though? Even if it was visual changed (simple enough to do) would that mean it is no longer a reboot?I haven't accussed them of being 'lazy' - I've accussed them of being dishonest when they say - "It's the Prime Timeline of Kirk/Spock/TOS...no it's not a retcon or a reboot.." <--- Which is what the production leads were saying. Given the major redesign of the 1701 (again, the original look of the Starship/Constitution Class was used as recently as 2005 in ENT - "In a Mirror Darkly") for this production IMO that claim that it's not a retcon or reboot doesn't hold up. <--- I just wish they'd be honest and finally admit that, but that's me.
This assumes that the writers/producer actually think they were being dishonest. Because I don't think they do. They very well might believe that they are writing stories that fit in "the Prime Timeline of Kirk/Spock/TOS". Their perception/perspective of what constitutes a "retcon or a reboot" is probably different than a fan's. They're thinking of actual changes to story continuity and not redesigns of make up, models and propsI haven't accussed them of being 'lazy' - I've accussed them of being dishonest when they say - "It's the Prime Timeline of Kirk/Spock/TOS...no it's not a retcon or a reboot.." <--- Which is what the production leads were saying. Given the major redesign of the 1701 (again, the original look of the Starship/Constitution Class was used as recently as 2005 in ENT - "In a Mirror Darkly") for this production IMO that claim that it's not a retcon or reboot doesn't hold up. <--- I just wish they'd be honest and finally admit that, but that's me.
Exactly. If I can handle the shift from TOS to TMP to TWOK in visuals, I can handle DISCO'sThis assumes that the writers/producer actually think they were being dishonest. Because I don't think they do. They very well might believe that they are writing stories that fit in "the Prime Timeline of Kirk/Spock/TOS". Their perception/perspective of what constitutes a "retcon or a reboot" is probably different than a fan's. They're thinking of actual changes to story continuity and not redesigns of make up, models and props
Which makes their interpretations disappointing to some (not me), but not “wrong”.This assumes that the writers/producer actually think they were being dishonest. Because I don't think they do. They very well might believe that they are writing stories that fit in "the Prime Timeline of Kirk/Spock/TOS". Their perception/perspective of what constitutes a "retcon or a reboot" is probably different than a fan's. They're thinking of actual changes to story continuity and not redesigns of make up, models and props
This will vary from person to person. In my opinion, no it doesn't. First of all, the idea that all Starfleet and Klingon designs were seen in TOS is borderline ridiculous.The question that this all seems to dance around is: "Does changing visual information (alien and ship designs, planetscapes, costumes, etc.) count as continuity errors when they clash with how those things were presented in other stories that ostensibly are part of the same larger world (like how DSC uses different uniforms then what the TOS pilots showed us were being used)?"
I don’t think it does (but that’s me). I look at any TV show or movie set in non-contemporary or non-historical settings (anything fantastical, basically) as no more bound to a particular “style” than comics. As the settings are unreal, I don’t expect exact consistency from one art direction team to another. I just view it as Steve Ditko Spider-Man compared to John Romita (Sr. or Jr.) Spider-Man. Same continuity, different looks. Again, that’s me.The question that this all seems to dance around is: "Does changing visual information (alien and ship designs, planetscapes, costumes, etc.) count as continuity errors when they clash with how those things were presented in other stories that ostensibly are part of the same larger world (like how DSC uses different uniforms then what the TOS pilots showed us were being used)?"
The question that this all seems to dance around is: "Does changing visual information (alien and ship designs, planetscapes, costumes, etc.) count as continuity errors when they clash with how those things were presented in other stories that ostensibly are part of the same larger world (like how DSC uses different uniforms then what the TOS pilots showed us were being used)?"
If they explain everything on screen would that solve the issue?I think that's a good statement of the issue. It seems there are two main schools of thought: the "world building" school (which seems to be me and lawman and others) and the "flexible representation" school (Ovation, MakeshiftPython, fireproof78, and others). Not that I presume to speak for anyone.
I should say that I agree that changes that are explained in a plausible, sensible way don't bother me. And I do hope Discovery succeeds and I think they have done a lot of strong work on the show.
I would imagine that a writer who states that the main character has horns, orange skin, tufts of purple fur and three fingered hands would likely influence at least some of the choices made by the makeup designers.
Nope.The question that this all seems to dance around is: "Does changing visual information (alien and ship designs, planetscapes, costumes, etc.) count as continuity errors when they clash with how those things were presented in other stories that ostensibly are part of the same larger world (like how DSC uses different uniforms then what the TOS pilots showed us were being used)?"
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