May the fleas of a thousand tribbles infest your crotch.
Too late...
May the fleas of a thousand tribbles infest your crotch.
Definitely a matter of taste. Still, that being said, it's not as though violence and horror weren't part of TOS, even if restrained by the limits of sixties TV. I just rewatched "The Galileo Seven" the other day and, sure enough, one redshirt gets impaled by a giant spear and another redshirt is apparently beaten to death by a giant caveman, albeit offscreen. And there's a whole lot of heated debate about whether it safe to bury the bodies, about how they're too heavy to be brought back to Enterprise, etc. It's fairly tame by modern standards, and would probably be gorier if filmed today, but it's not as though the Final Frontier was ever a sanitized utopia where death and brutality never happened. And, as noted, the Klingons have never been known for their delicate sensibilities and peaceful dispositions.
To my mind, sf and horror have been joined at the hip since Frankenstein at least, so I kinda expect them to overlap sometimes, as they often did on TOS. And, I admit, I've never really understood why people were so freaked-out by the ending of "Conspiracy." Had no one else seen Scanners?
And, yes, I love The Brain That Would Not Die and own it on DVD.![]()
Oh no you din't.
DS9's second season is lacklustre at best and probably one of the weakest seasons overall in the franchise. The first, though? Totally different story. Emissary is the best Trek pilot, A Man Alone and Past Prologue do a great job establishing this new Trek and the world of DS9, Captive Pursuit, Progress and Dax are strong standalones, and it ends with Duet, a contender for best. episode. ever. and In the Hands of the Prophets.
It's got some dross like all the first seasons (although Move Along Home and The Forsaken are the only ones I think are unwatchable) but recently I've really begun to appreciate what it does have to offer.
I agree. The height of horrific imagery for the franchise is unquestionably Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan. And it's also undisputedly the fan favorite.
I don't see that, especially after Discovery. But I'd say Wrath of Khan lost the title as soon as "Conspiracy" in the first season of TNG.
Nothing we see in Khan is actually that explicit -- the imagination does the work. And that's why it's so effective and memorable.
I still have a feeling that the writers did that on purpose because even they're coming to realize all these holograms are getting obnoxious and making less and less sense.
That’s why it’s for kings.It's pretty frigging explicit, my man. That's 35 years of desensitized perception talking.
Creatures burrowing their way slowly into people's bodies via the ear (massive close-up)
Horrific burn victims, bloodied and suffering throughout (Preston, sickbay, Khan)
Murdered innocent civilians, sliced open and hung from the ceiling upside down to bleed out, puddles of blood on the floor under them.
People screaming horrifically as they are engulfed in flames during a Phaser hit
A gigantic close-up of a disgusting, bloody creature emerging from someone's ear (say that 3 times fast and tell me that doesn't make you uncomfortable)
Yeah...I think that takes the cake. Especially given the context.
Conspiracy was graphic, but it was cartoony and pretty much played for "we blowed up the bad guy good" value. As a kid, it never made me cringe. It was more of a "WOAH AWESOME" moment (I was in 7th grade, cut me some slack here) whereas TWOK still makes me unsettled now. The context is much more serious and realistic.
It's pretty frigging explicit, my man. That's 35 years of desensitized perception talking.
Creatures burrowing their way slowly into people's bodies via the ear (massive close-up)
Horrific burn victims, bloodied and suffering throughout (Preston, sickbay, Khan)
Murdered innocent civilians, sliced open and hung from the ceiling upside down to bleed out, puddles of blood on the floor under them.
People screaming horrifically as they are engulfed in flames during a Phaser hit
A gigantic close-up of a disgusting, bloody creature emerging from someone's ear (say that 3 times fast and tell me that doesn't make you uncomfortable)
Yeah...I think that takes the cake. Especially given the context.
Conspiracy was graphic, but it was cartoony and pretty much played for "we blowed up the bad guy good" value. As a kid, it never made me cringe. It was more of a "WOAH AWESOME" moment (I was in 7th grade, cut me some slack here) whereas TWOK still makes me unsettled now. The context is much more serious and realistic.
I’m confused by the Spock/Amanda stuff. The idea is that Spock was messed up by Amanda withholding affection, because he’s half-human and needs a mother’s love in a way that Vulcans apparently don’t. This implies that Vulcans are genetically predisposed to be emotionless, unlike humans. Except that isn’t true — Vulcans have to learn to bury their emotions, just like a human presumably would. So being raised in the Vulcan way shouldn’t have affected Spock any differently than a full Vulcan. Or am I reading this wrong?
There's nothing explicit about the burrowing creature. It's just a little slimy thing entering the ear canal and later plopping back out. That it seems so horrifying is a testament to restraint, I think. The idea is way more effective than the graphic gore Discovery has given us.
Trek II is definitely more graphic than Trek's TV incanation from the '60s, but it's still a PG film. Even by the standards of its time it was considered family fare.
One can't just pretend that communication seen in hundreds of episodes never happened. .
Hopefully the idea is that his parents did just fine, and the core of Spock's problem is actually the Red Angel.I’m confused by the Spock/Amanda stuff. The idea is that Spock was messed up by Amanda withholding affection, because he’s half-human and needs a mother’s love in a way that Vulcans apparently don’t.
Some people just aren't happy unless they're watching Star Trek that reminds them of when they used to wear MC Hammer pants. They think new Star Trek "Can't Touch This".
Why not? When they first revamped the Klingons back in '79, we pretended they'd always looked that way until ENTERPRISE finally got around to "explaining" it twenty-five years later. Heck, that was Roddenberry's explanation at the time: "We're just doing what we couldn't afford to do back on the old TV show. Just pretend the Klingons always looked this way."
Not every change in art direction requires an in-universe explanation or means that, ohmigod, it's a whole new continuity. It's a TV show, not actual history. Just chalk it up to artistic license and move on.
That's probably what Roddenberry would have done.
I'm not convinced Spock murdered anyone, nor that he is psychopathic. In fact, I'm very far from it.I don't like it either. And as I mentioned earlier they could f*ck this up badly, if Spock does turn out to be a psychopath that is somehow fixed by Burnham.
While I agree it is technically a "new" backstory because it is new information, I don't think the new information necessarily will overwrite any pre-existing canonical information about his backstory. Sure -- it's possible that it will, but I don't think it needs to be overwritten by this particular plot line, nor do I believe it actually will get overwritten.Initially they said they won't recast Spock as it is too iconic a character. But after that initial hesitation they are showing a lot of guts by making him a central part of season 2 arc and creating a new backstory for him. The producers seem confident about this, so I am hoping they will pull it off. But at this point I am skeptical.
Why are you here? Give it up.Ridiculing the past now to justify everything
Maybe people will finally concede that the show violates canon at least instead of arguing about it for pages and pages.
I love they they used "Control" from David Mack's excellent Section 31 novels!
Personally, I didn't feel in 1979 that the new look Klingons in TMP violated canon, nor in 1987 when TNG followed TMP's lead. That look was just set-dressing; it didn't affect who the Klingons were and what they meant to the show.Maybe people will finally concede that the show violates canon at least instead of arguing about it for pages and pages.
Canon is whatever the makers say it is. They can keep it, revise it, whatever, the result will still be canon. Their show, their rules.Maybe people will finally concede that the show violates canon at least instead of arguing about it for pages and pages.
EX-Astris gave this a 1/10, the only 1 in the entire series so far.
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