Discovery has a very "anime" vibe to it. Has anyone else noticed this? Or almost like a music video, like scenes are a semi-symbolic representation of events. It may depend on director, but the images that immediately(and most obviously) spring to mind are things like Burnham's court martial, or the "Klingon fleet" poised to attack earth.
It's like the feeling you get when watching a stage play, and the various representations a play will use. Maybe it's artistically designed to be that way.
TOS certainly was. One of the things the original cast have pointed out is that later productions were never quite as
theatrical as TOS. This is another feature of the "Space Odyssey" Paradigm shift IMO: most science fiction movies and TV shows since then are filmed and produced almost like adaptations from novels, where as TOS had the flavor and style of a stage production that just happened to be filmed. A more clear example of this is in sitcoms: a show like The Big Bang Theory or Two and a Half Men will have subtly different story elements and execution than a show like Arrested Development or Shameless. Not so much because of the premise or characters involved, but because they're approaching the stories in slightly different formats; the former are using a "live studio audience" gimmick (even when they're not) while the latter are more cinematic narratives on their own.
This comes out of the subtleties of production choices, camera work, dialog choices and speaking style; a more theatrical production includes a lot more wide shots and the blocking usually orients the action towards the center of the stage (so if Spock is talking to Kirk, at least one of them is always facing the center of the bridge, or the camera is arranged so that they're both facing the center of the frame). By comparison, TNG involves more frequent use of close-ups, soft cuts, and panning takes within a scene. The action isn't as often centrally oriented; more often than not, everyone is facing the same direction and the focus of the scene is what everyone is actually supposed to be looking at and interacting with rather than the person they're actually talking to.
Discovery leans back towards a more theatrical style, IMO. Not nearly to the extent TOS did, of course, but there is a noticeable preference for wider angles and more centralized scene blocking. A really great example of this is the banter with Saru, Burnham and Mirror Georgiou. They're literally on opposite sides of the room, all sniping at Georgiou who is sitting in the center of everything; Detmer and Owosekun keep looking over their shoulder wondering "What the fuck is going on?"
The more theatrical approach makes the visuals less a matter of literal truth as much as "There's a Klingon fleet bearing down on Earth!" without providing you with any information about how close they are or how many there are. Some anime productions take this same approach, while some take the more literal "visual novel" approach.