Yes, I do. DS9 was the prefect template, go 2 seasons and establish the characters, get everything set with them.
Then go serialized.
I'm very pleased that DSC just swung for it right out of the gate. Flawed or not, I prefer Trek swinging for the fences rather than trying to meekly bunt it's way on.
I'd say Discovery came out with 4 flat tires and a busted engine.How exactly was Discovery "swinging for the fences"? It plays exactly like the cold, wet mud you accuse DS9 of being during its first couple of seasons.
I'd say Discovery came out with 4 flat tires and a busted engine.
I'd say Discovery came out with 4 flat tires and a busted engine.![]()
Well I'd say DS9 did pretty well. I can't speak on VOY or ENT as I couldn't commit to either of them. A lot of post TOS didn't really resonate with me honestly. I love TOS and DS9. TNG was mostly hit and miss for me and I couldn't get into Voyager or Enterprise. Both failed to grab me by episode 5 of each respective series. I tried to be fair. I was super excited for Discovery because it was going back to or rather very close to the TOS era which I love dearly. I was just so let down by it. I wanted to love it but I was ultimately disappointed.Which is still far better than any other post-TOS Trek series, so things are looking up.
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Well I'd say DS9 did pretty well. I can't speak on VOY or ENT as I couldn't commit to either of them. A lot of post TOS didn't really resonate with me honestly. I love TOS and DS9. TNG was mostly hit and miss for me and I couldn't get into Voyager or Enterprise. Both failed to grab me by episode 5 of each respective series. I tried to be fair. I was super excited for Discovery because it was going back to or rather very close to the TOS era which I love dearly. I was just so let down by it. I wanted to love it but I was ultimately disappointed.
Sounds like you dislike more of the franchise than you actually like.
DSC is the first TV Trek I haven't been disappointed in right out of the gate in season one since TNG (although I loved the DS9 and VOY pilots...just that the rest of those first seasons didn't live up to them.
Fortunately, post TOS Trek typically improves greatly after the first season. Even more after the second.
How exactly was Discovery "swinging for the fences"? It plays exactly like the cold, wet mud you accuse DS9 of being during its first couple of seasons.
I am eager to give ENT another chance after seeing that Vulcan Zombie ship episode.
I'm exaggerating a bit. I don't think anyone actually have come out and directly accused Orville of violating Gene's Vision, but the season 1 discussion threads were filled with people measuring it to the standards of Star Trek with statements like "they don't make penis jokes on Star Trek" is response to Orville's jokes on that subject.People do this?
Again, it wouldn't have mattered. Fuller likely would still have dicked around and used the budget up, this derailing the show and postponing its premiere by nine months regardless. Whether or not it was stand alone or a story arc wouldn't have made a difference either way.i said if it was episodic from the get go the story might not be hurt by the constant behind the scenes drama.
Having rewatched both shows in recent years, I will say they are much better than I remember from their broadcast. Voyager in particular has a much more engaging cast than I originally gave them credit for.Taking on VOY and ENT would be quite the undertaking but I'm willing to roll my sleeves up and give it another go.
Yes, I do. DS9 was the prefect template, go 2 seasons and establish the characters, get everything set with them.
Then go serialized.
I'de say that in terms of "adventurousness" DSC is probably on par with most other streaming and cable shows of it's kind.If STD was anything, it was timid.
It would have benefited from better writing, regardless of format.
The Shorts are proof they can still do good stand-alones. But I don't think there's anything inherently wrong with breaking a story into 13 parts. "It's too much like a soap opera!" I think that's more part of a viewer's own cultural programming. Elephant in the room: "Ick! I don't like soap operas because it's for housewives! Ewwww!!!!"
I don't think Star Trek is at its best serialised. DS9 had continuous arcs but it was episodic enough to take breaks from those storylines. Discovery should follow that model because it does the best of both worlds. Enterprise put all their eggs in one basket with the Xindi arc and if you liked that story then Season 3 was enjoyable but if you didn't it was one to skip because there was nothing else to watch that season.
I think a standalone format would have sapped the overall tension and drama that a slow 15 hour build up created. That kind of drama and gravitas is more difficult, or actually maybe impossible, to replicate in just 40 some odd minutes.
I prefer not having an arbitrary reset button and mandatory resolution at the end of 45 mins of a TV show. It makes it harder for me to get invested in the characters when there is little character or plot development that has any kind of meaningful impact. Look at how Wesley's character changed over the course of Buffy and then Angel. He was an amazing character with a lot of depth because he was allowed to grow and change over time.
This is what it comes down to. The competence of the people running the project. Arc or episodic, poor writing sinks it either way.
The thing is that episodic and serialized exists on a spectrum. Someone who says that they'd like Discovery to be less serialized might not be pining for the days of Voyager. They may simply want to have a format which is more DS9-like - allowing the characters to change and grow but also a great variety in terms of stories which can be told.
When weren't the Klingons one dimensional onscreen besides TOS?What I really don't want is for them just to take episodic Trek tropes and stretch them way out, which is what I thought we got in season 1. We had a standoff with one-dimensional Klingons, a lift of Devil in the Dark, and then a long jaunt to the one-dimensional Mirror Universe. Even if I give the most charitable read to what they were trying to do -- to show how the Federation rediscovers its values in an ugly time -- they don't actually show how the Federation rediscovers its values. Instead, they abruptly wrap it up like every other Trek show, with a big speech from Burnham that could have come out of the Omega Glory. That's fine when you're telling a complete morality play in 45 minutes, but I expect something more sophisticated from a modern serialized drama.
I think a standalone format would have sapped the overall tension and drama that a slow 15 hour build up created. That kind of drama and gravitas is more difficult, or actually maybe impossible, to replicate in just 40 some odd minutes.
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