Well put.Self Discovery.
Well put.Self Discovery.
You could say the show is about a Federation starship propelled to an uncertain future; attempting to rebuild the Federation.
But even so, that's just one of many plots.
My point is, while I'm along for the ride and do enjoy it, Discovery lacks focus. It's all over the place. I don't feel like the show has a centralized journey. It sets up these intriguing plots or mysteries but then almost seems to lose interest in them and pivots over to something else to the point where what was originally set up now becomes relegated to the background that can be resolved with a line of dialogue.
And look, perhaps this is by design. If it is intentionally set up that way, fine. It just frustrates me.
And look, perhaps this is by design. If it is intentionally set up that way, fine. It just frustrates me.
It was absolutely not intentionally set up that way. The original showrunner had his own ideas, then they got nixed, but certain aspects of his ideas remained, but were changed from their original envisioning. Then a similar thing happened halfway through the second season. Then someone made a decision to classify everything and send the ship into the future because they just couldn’t get the original setting to work. So the entire show has been continually flip-flopping between ideas, and it wasn’t intentional or part of some grand plan. But lots of shows don’t actually hit their stride or figure out just what they’re supposed to be about until later seasons anyway.
The third season has done a pretty good job of laying down what it's going to be from now on. Discovery in the 32nd Century, taking orders from Vance, doing whatever story is going on in the week.Very true. And at this point, I don't think the show even know what it wants to be.
The premise of ENT was to show the formation of the Federation. But that’s not actually what happened.
Technically, ENT was about the early days of Starfleet, before the Federation and the Prime Directive.
It ended up being about finding common ground in difficult situations.
The setting was the early days of the Earth Starfleet. But that wasn’t the premise. The premise was the formation of the Federation.
But that’s such a nebulous concept. You can apply that same idea about lots of shows. And, really, that’s not what ENT ended up becoming. For the first two seasons the show was just TNG/VOY Jr., with a ship and crew flying around aimlessly just ‘exploring’ things. Almost every S1 and 2 script could have been written as a VOY episode. Then it became an allegory for 9-11. Then it finally became TOS/TNG Prequel Overkill (that’s not actually a complaint, mind you. I enjoyed the final season, but by then it was too late.)
Yes, it could be applied to any Star Trek show.
And I would not say it was aimless. Everything was either undefined or loosely established in S1 & S2.
There just wasn’t as much to learn in that environment as expected, even though it was supposed to be the wild west in space. Everything important had already been covered by the three series preceding it, and the show played it too safe considering the setting. That's all.
Discovery at the very least, it its credit, does take risks.
It sounds to me like you want Discovery to be pigeon-holed into one thing.
Well, there's a parallel between what's going on with DSC and what happened with DS9.I'm sorry, but, that's not accurate.
It's about exploiting IP and trademarks CBS owns.
Self Discovery.
But Burnham’s journey has been so muddled and inconsistent that I struggle to say it’s done this particularly well.
I feel like her complications are present and in every scene she's in. She wants to be constantly be in the middle of the action but doesn't always make the best choices, i.e. Georgiou and the show unpacks the consequences of those choices.
And that's just from the first three seasons. Wait 'til we see what's next!Michael Burnham's extended adopted family on adventures in space.
Mum, adopted Mum, dead mentor Mum, mirror universe adopted Mum, Dad, Adopted Dad, Adopted brother, half-Klingon boyfriend, magic future boyfriend and mirror universe twin. Did I miss anyone?
As I would expect.Yeah, I think this season has done a better job examining those complications. At the same time, just this week she apparently chooses to deceive her captain and crewmates, just as she chose to deceive the bridge crew way back in the very first episode.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.