In short, unless there is some plaque or display that estabishes this is the Enterprise-D, I'm going to assume it's another ship of the same class.
Yes.... but.... Occam's Razor Says "the simplest explanation is the best explanation"In short, unless there is some plaque or display that estabishes this is the Enterprise-D, I'm going to assume it's another ship of the same class.
did anyone complain that the "Red Alert" screens in TWOK were also those of the Nostromo in Alien?
Yes.... but.... Occam's Razor Says "the simplest explanation is the best explanation". So what's simpler, to say that Picard in his dream in that is on Enterprise-D, the ship he is most closely associated with? This requires no further explanation.
Alternatively, if he is on a completely different galaxy class ship, the further questions arise. What ship is it? Why is he dreaming of that ship?
Alien is a 20th Century Fox film (unless it was stock sound FX).
Specifically having to do with Entertainment there is definitely room for both. While many times I do indeed prefer a complex movie, that requires me to follow along closely, frequently I find a "dumb action" movie (as long as it's fun) just as satisfying. Think Independence Day (original), or Die Hard (original). Dumb as shit movies, but also fun as hell, and I watch them both yearly during their respective holidays (4th of July and Christmas)On the other hand, who wants "simple" in entertainment? Simple is always wrong or otherwise inferior. Complex is interesting.
Just goes to show that Occam's Razor has no value whatsoever. There's no "simpler" in reality.
As demonstrated in this thread the alert sound has been used in multiple different places for different things.Since the Nostromo is not part of ST, its sounds can be reused.
I guess you wouldn't mind Starfleet phasers sounding like Klingon disruptors, or a Borg cube interior sounding like the D's engineering, but I would.
Except this isn't reality. It's a fictional script. The trailers have been seemingly full of dream sequences, so there's every reason to assume that this is also a dream, especially with Picard's "I was haunted by my past" dialogue accompanying the scene.
Why would producers want to show anything that's not immediately recognizable?Do we even know for a fact it's Ten Forward? Couldn't it be somewhere else that just happens to have similar looking windows?
All the damn time. It's been so commonplace all over the Trek franchise since forever, I'm really not sure why we're drawing attention to it now and trying to make it prove something.Still, are there any similarly reused sounds in the shows before DIS?
I guarantee this Short Trek has nothing to do with Best of Both Worlds at all.Since Picard is on the Enterprise-D in his dream sequence, and we have established that it’s Mars out the Ten-Forward window I think it’s very likely that we are looking at a flashback back to the The Best of Both Worlds. We are definitely going to see something about that very specific past, which gives Picard’s story arc much to work with. Lots of people died in the Borg attack. That was a established in TNG-BBW, Family, and DS9-Emmisary. We don’t know if anyone died on Mars, but we do know that there was a thriving terraformed world there by the 23rd century. We know that the Mars Defense Perimeter was broken.
This could easily be a “Rogue One” kind of thing, albeit a short. One line is used to build a whole story. But clearly most of the story is about the two little girls, not the “emergency.”
If bad things happen on Mars they have a great opportunity to demonstrate the realistic consequences of Picard’s involvement with the Borg. Think about how much he suffered in TNG-Family and First Contact. He keeps talking about the past haunting him in the trailers. This really makes sense to me.
Because CBS is ruining Trek or something.All the damn time. It's been so commonplace all over the Trek franchise since forever, I'm really not sure why we're drawing attention to it now and trying to make it prove something.
Well, I mean that does go without saying...Because CBS is ruining Trek or something.
Not every set we've seen in the trailers for Picard has been recognizable. It looks like the majority of the places we visit in Picard are going to be new, and even the one place we know we've seen, Starfleet Command, looks different from the last time we saw it in one of the 24th century series.
Do we even know for a fact it's Ten Forward? Couldn't it be somewhere else that just happens to have similar looking windows?
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