My favourite scene too.That got a chuckle from everyone in my house.
My favourite scene too.That got a chuckle from everyone in my house.
What I want to know is what happened to Jean Lucs wardrobe over the years. Back in TNG he was all up for showing a bit of cleavage when not in uniformThe TNG Season 1 and 2 "pajamas" did manage to last for about 16 years or so in-universe so at least that design held on for more than a few years.
New York Times review.. Again, mixed.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/06/arts/television/star-trek-lower-decks-review.html
New York Times review.. Again, mixed.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/06/arts/television/star-trek-lower-decks-review.html
The New York Times. I agree with them politically, and I'll just stick with that. Not once have I thought about looking to a newspaper.New York Times review.. Again, mixed.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/06/arts/television/star-trek-lower-decks-review.html
Just reporting show reaction from the big names. I always decide for myself.Good thing I just watch the show and decide for myself.
The New York Times. I agree with them politically, and I'll just stick with that. Not once have I thought about looking to a newspaper.
When I look for reviews, I'll go some select YouTubers (the ones who I don't identify as the Fandom Menace), Jammer's Reviews (despite what I said about him upthread), and posts here. Maybe Variety, but sometimes they come across too much like Film Snobs.
Even though it's a completely different animal, if I have to place this series somewhere, I'd put it above VOY/ENT and just underneath TNG/DS9.
New York Times review.. Again, mixed.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/06/arts/television/star-trek-lower-decks-review.html
In counterpoint, the show tweaks the franchise’s tradition of hyper-virility, with a Kirk- and Riker-like first officer, Ransom (Jerry O’Connell), who can dispatch green giants in hand-to-hand combat and is given to pronouncements like, “Nothing compares to the firm, hot pulse of a joystick in your hand.” The determination to take the “adult” in adult animation seriously can take even less subtle directions, as when a crew member mistakenly offers a token of timber, rather than crystal, to an alien leader and the dignitary recoils and cries, “He’s got wood!” There are several Prime Directives being violated there, one having to do with lazy joke writing.
Pay.
WALL!!
‘Star Trek: Lower Decks’ Review: Life as Phaser Fodder
An animated addition to the “Trek” universe is part fan service, part smutty office sitcom.
“Star Trek: Lower Decks,” CBS All Access’s latest offering in the “Trek” franchise, focuses on the kinds of low-level characters who get stuck doing all the paperwork.Credit...CBS All Access
By Mike Hale
- Aug. 6, 2020
Comedy. The final frontier.
“Star Trek: Lower Decks,” the latest “Trek” extension from CBS All Access (following “Discovery” and “Picard”), goes where no series in the franchise has gone before, at least not intentionally: full-time laughs. The “Trek” shows have had their playful elements from the start. But when your primary source of humor over the years has been making fun of Vulcans or androids who have no sense of humor — well, you see the issue.
“Lower Decks,” whose 10 episodes appear weekly beginning Thursday, also stands out for being animated, but that’s not a first. The earliest “Star Trek” spinoff, back in 1973, was “Star Trek: The Animated Series,” a straightforward continuation of the original for which most of its cast supplied voices. (Its two seasons are also available from All Access.)
The new show goes its own way, in keeping with the somewhat freewheeling vibe the television side of the franchise has exhibited under the supervision of Alex Kurtzman. Developed by Mike McMahan, a specialist in animated, adult-oriented science-fiction comedy — he was a creator of Hulu’s “Solar Opposites” and an executive producer of the category’s ne plus ultra, “Rick and Morty” — it’s about half “Star Trek” fan service and half smutty workplace sitcom.
Apparently, that’s not an easy formula. Through four episodes, “Lower Decks” feels caught in between. It’s a smooth and zippy package, but it doesn’t register very strongly as either a geekfest or a transgressive satire. Which is another way of saying it’s not all that funny. Wherever it’s going, it’s not doing it very boldly.
Plots abide by “Star Trek” norms as misunderstandings with funny-looking aliens or viruses picked up on-planet lead to pitched battles that look catastrophic until suddenly everything’s OK again. Boimler gets to spend a lot of time screeching about the rules, much in the style of the touchy teenager Morty on “Rick and Morty.”
As background music, there’s a continual hum of “Trek” nostalgia and gentle mockery, for which viewers’ appetites will vary. Much of this comes in enthusiastic outbursts from Mariner, a Starfleet history buff, though her facts are shaky. (The legendary Spock “fought Khan and some space whales.”) Reference is made to the “most important person in Starfleet history,” an in-joke that will delight fans of “The Next Generation” and “Deep Space Nine.”
In counterpoint, the show tweaks the franchise’s tradition of hyper-virility, with a Kirk- and Riker-like first officer, Ransom (Jerry O’Connell), who can dispatch green giants in hand-to-hand combat and is given to pronouncements like, “Nothing compares to the firm, hot pulse of a joystick in your hand.” The determination to take the “adult” in adult animation seriously can take even less subtle directions, as when a crew member mistakenly offers a token of timber, rather than crystal, to an alien leader and the dignitary recoils and cries, “He’s got wood!” There are several Prime Directives being violated there, one having to do with lazy joke writing.
I certainly am.Well...
Certainly look forward to that.
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I certainly am.
Context will make a difference.
Ah, yes, low-brow sexually explicit humor.
Star Trek!
"Out of place." For what? A job site? I've heard worse from my counselor colleagues, all with graduate level degrees or higher.“Nothing compares to the firm, hot pulse of a joystick in your hand.”
No matter the context, that's a level a humor I think is just way out of place. Even if he's literally holding a pulsing (!) joystick to manually steer the ship or something, what's being said is quite clear and... Come on.
Wouldn't be the first time in the franchise.Ah, yes, low-brow sexually explicit humor.
Star Trek!
I grow so tired of the constant myth that Star Trek is for the intellectual elite, as though it has never had low brow comedy in it all all, and we should all clutch our pearls at such indignity.Wouldn't be the first time in the franchise.
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