Everything related to Burnham is boring as fuck.
The writing has definitely let Sonequa Martin-Green down.
Everything related to Burnham is boring as fuck.
The writing has definitely let Sonequa Martin-Green down.
I think this is definitely a sign of the BTS chaos is the different visions of Burnham and how she handles problems. I definitely liked her more in Season 2, though Season 1 was an interesting challenge and someone I identified with more with the self-deprecating, negative self-image Burnham could struggle with, especially with her guilt around Georgiou.I think Sonequa Martin-Green has a unique problem in that the writers are desperate to make the character loved by the audiences so they don't ever give her anything quiet to do. She's the big ass action hero, the relative of the much-beloved character, the moral coscience, the anti-hero, and so on many times over. The thing is that every character in the show and in Star Trek in general is most likable when they're doing little things.
Character wise I was dissapointed in what was billed as great love story between Culber and Stammets. No real time was spent developing them in a meaningful way.
I still enjoyed it though.
I think the wormholes were programmed to all go through Stardate whateveritwas on their way to their final destinations, which is where they reappeared.Mainly how the signals all appear in the first episode but then they re-appear one at a time for them to chase
That makes as much sense as anything, but they should already have had the coordinates for all the signals given that they all appeared at once.I think the wormholes were programmed to all go through Stardate whateveritwas on their way to their final destinations, which is where they reappeared.
Or something like that anyway. Michael and Mum seemed to have unlimited access to space and time on that thing, at the end Michael literally scrolls through earlier episodes to get to the specific points she's supposed to appear.
The finale felt like - in retrospect - the plot equivalent of "controlled demolition" to me. Basically someone - whether Kurtzman or the studio - decided that everything that they had been building up in Discovery for two years was totally unworkable - other than the great cast - and they wanted to wipe the board and do something new.
It really does make me wonder what has been going on behind the scenes all along, not just during the periods when we know there were issues but all the way through as the approach used after the issues were resolved has a direct relation to what went on before.This has to be the best description of what happened in the season 2 finale (and now season 3). And also why I utterly hate it.
Also they did not only just wipe the story board - they also wiped the characters. With Burnham and all her adventures being classified, Spock is now entirely unfazed by her or her fate. In fact, his short interaction with No. 1 in a turbolift is now the more defining backstory for his habits.
It really does make me wonder what has been going on behind the scenes all along, not just during the periods when we know there were issues but all the way through as the approach used after the issues were resolved has a direct relation to what went on before.
Hence why there are certain points in both S1 and S2 were I think it all went a bit pear shaped script/plot wise and it shows in the final product.
Was it too many cooks in the kitchen.
Too much interfering from up above (or too little even).
Trying to fit too much in at once.
Perhaps its a case of internal CBS politics at work.
At times it just seems like the show is being pulled in too many directions at once, this is not unusual in the writers room but normally there is someone that has a vision of the overall direction of the show that can steer everyone else, the last two seasons feel like they changed driver multiple times mid season and that hurt the show because of the sharp changes in story direction, as soon as you start to make a connection with characters and events they pull another handbrake turn and go off in another direction when there is no real story reason to do so besides it being the end of the Federation/Galaxy/Universe again.
I must also agree with @eschaton as well, it does feel like a demolition bordering on a reset for those who remain in the original Disco/ToS time period (perhaps paving the way for a Pike/Enterprise show with a focus on getting the basics right first), Terminator The Sarah Connor Chronicles did the same when they were on the bubble in the hopes it would save the show, the circumstances used for the reset is very similar to Discovery as they also jumped forward in time although not as far.
I think the jump to the future was entirely unnecessary. I'll fight with anyone who wants to, but, the show absolutely did not violate any narrative canon whatsoever. The lack of mentioning something doesn't mean it can't exist.
After Control was defeated, the jump into the future wasn't needed, yet, the writers were hellbent on doing it anyway. All they needed to do was create some situation where when Control was defeated, Discovery could've been caught in the gravitational pull of the wormhole and it was too late to turn around. As far as everyone who witnesses this is concerned, Discovery may very well have been destroyed and the need to cover it up doesn't have to happen.
I've said exactly a thousand times on this board, but, I still just don't understand the thinking behind this as a means to "sync" Discovery up with canon. Oh, we'll find out why the USS Discovery is never mentioned on any of the other shows. There have been thousands of Federation starships over the centuries. The fact that Kirk, Picard, Spock, Sisko, or Janeway neglects to mention the events of this series absolutely does not mean the show can't exist.
I think the problem is that we, the fans, care a whole lot about canon.
But now the powers that be (Kurtzman, previously JJ Abrams, Orci) think they have to care about canon, too.
But they're wrong. Because they really don't care about it - and that's fine. But now they're investing a whole lot of energy into something they don't care about, instead of using that energy to tell interesting stories.
I think one of the underrated qualities of Rick Berman as a producer was taking care of canon in a way that all the writers and producers and directors didn't have to anymore, and could focus on the stuff they were actually invested in.
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