Tomorrow morning just can't get here quickly enough. With episode 2 there will be a new thread and new things to discuss. I am excite
Tomorrow morning just can't get here quickly enough. With episode 2 there will be a new thread and new things todiscussargue about. I am excite
They were a regime of human-supremacists who subjugated, killed and ate other sapient species. So yeah, 'cannibal space nazis' is pretty accurate.
Who knows what the intent was! It was a terrible creative decision regardless.
Yes. And for that to work you need to have coherent theme and decent grasp of psychology. It seemed like they were going for pretty interesting exploration of the dark places 'ends justify means' and 'hard men making hard choices' leads to with Lorca... but then it turns out that instead of a psychologically scarred war veteran he was a cartoon villain from mirror universe. And that's the point, that is how Discovery sucked at dealing with the dark themes, it made a joke out of them.
*shrug* I think 'puerile' was perfectly fair. Edgy cannibal space nazis are the sort of villains twelve-year-olds find cool.
I see. I described accurately what we actually saw on Discovery, if that seemed immature to you, then the fault does not lie with the messenger. But as you seem to have run out of even bad arguments and result to outright insults, it might indeed be wiser to end this conversation.The inability to handle seeing bare breasts without become highly agitated seems a purile response to me. The utilization of space nazi and cannibal from the get go strongly suggests that being a flagbearer for nuance is your strong suit, and that you figure the best way to win an argument is to start with the most extreme position, regardless of how immature it sounds. I feel like I'm responding to an argument that was put together to sound smart to twelve year olds. So I'll stop here.
If anyone is interested my weekly podcast is doing a Picard review each week. The round table discussion includes one die hard Trekie and two casual fans so hopefully we can have a balanced discussion. It's SPOILER heavy and some NSFW language occasionally.
https://twitter.com/TalkingMovies3/status/1222638171676119043?s=19
The discuss for Picard stars at 1:09:15. Available from most Podcast platforms.
Edit: looks like my Twitter link is being striped out the show is called Talking@theMovies
What about the devolution virus (or whatever it was called) where Picard is consumed with fear?Hey, Jean luc admits he's felt a stranger to himself many times to Dajh, How many times has that been caught on screen?
Assimilated by the borg
Forced to live an entire life as an alien on an alien planet
de-aged to a fifteen year old by a transporter accident.
Forced to relive his life as a twenty year old cougar chaser.
How many have I missed?
The inability to handle seeing bare breasts without become highly agitated seems a purile response to me. The utilization of space nazi and cannibal from the get go strongly suggests that being a flagbearer for nuance is your strong suit, and that you figure the best way to win an argument is to start with the most extreme position, regardless of how immature it sounds. I feel like I'm responding to an argument that was put together to sound smart to twelve year olds. So I'll stop here.
I see. I described accurately what we actually saw on Discovery, if that seemed immature to you, then the fault does not lie with the messenger. But as you seem to have run out of even bad arguments and result to outright insults, it might indeed be wiser to end this conversation.
It is not, and I have zero problem with nudity in general; bring on the enlightened Terran naturists and their love instructors! But nudity is rarely done in Trek, and bringing it in a rape scene is problematic. And they specifically had to build a naked Klingon female latex suit for that one scene. Think about it! It was so important to get those tits in that rape scene that they spent time and money for that. It's fucked up.Portraying breasts is not childish.
Corrected.![]()
The lack of nuance is due the source material. Besides, weren't you done?And you described it all out of context hyperbolically and entirely lacking in nuance.
I have no issue with saying that Lorca was a massive missed opportunity to say something about PTSD and functioning in the real world, the Klingon boob was about as "adult" as the catsuits of the 90's, the Mirror Universe has been laughable simplicity going all the way back to "Mirror, Mirror". "Look! They eat people! They must be the bad guys!"
From my perspective, Discovery was about as subtle as a sledgehammer to the nads. While Trek has often lacked subtlety, Discovery was supposed to be a new day, a new platform, a new take on Trek. The only thing remotely "new" about it was using the arc format to stretch a two-part story into fifteen episodes.
It is not, and I have zero problem with nudity in general; bring on the enlightened Terran naturists and their love instructors! But nudity is rarely done in Trek, and bringing it in a rape scene is problematic. And they specifically had to build a naked Klingon female latex suit for that one scene. Think about it! It was so important to get those tits in that rape scene that they spent time and money for that. It's fucked up.
The lack of nuance is due the source material. Besides, weren't you done?
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