What's hard is over the last few years we've had definitional collapse. "Social justice warrior" is a pejorative for progressive activists, who make up roughly 6-8% of the population (per
Pew or
More in Common) in the franchise's home market. Roughly 92-94% of the population could potentially then be "anti-SJW".
That is clearly not what Chabon is saying. Don't put words in his mouth.
And the same section of the interview includes killing off Icheb and Hugh, both of which don't have strictly ideo-political valence.
Now you're moving goalposts. The only time Chabon mentions wanting to piss anyone off, it's in reference to clear bigots, and it's a short aside. Then he moves on, and he talks about a new topic, which is people who objected to killing Icheb and Hugh. He explains why he felt that there was artistic merit to killing off Icheb and Hugh, and therefore disagrees with those upset by that decision. At no point does he indicate that he wanted to piss people off by killing them.
Normal box office trends suggested TROS could have made around $3 billion. Instead it got just $1 billion. Solo lost money...
Yes,
Solo probably lost money when you factor in marketing; this is because "a Han Solo movie starring someone who isn't named Harrison Ford" is a
terrible idea for a big budget motion picture. And
The Rise of Skywalker underperformed -- and it underperformed because it was a
mediocre movie. But also -- it underperformed against expectations, but it made back its budget and was still a huge hit. $1 billion is not a failure! It's just not as big of a success as they wanted.
Neither of these films were done in by
The Last Jedi. They were done in by themselves.
I'd hate to see a hateful deconstruction then...
It was entitled
Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice.
and why does everything need to be deconstructed?
Because television has gotten too complex if you're not writing for children. The modern audience demands a level of thematic complexity that
requires a deconstruction of the Jean-Luc Picard character. Because, frankly, Picard in TNG was often more of a wish-fulfillment archetype than a fully-fleshed out, three-dimensional character.
And because just reprising Picard
without doing some level of deconstruction of him and the ideas of
Star Trek that are so closely associated with him is just not the story Chabon and Stewart wanted to tell. They both wanted to tell a story about a person who believed in certain values and then watched as his society betrayed those values, because they were both responding to the rise of the far-right in the Anglosphere (Trump in the U.S., Brexit in the U.K.). And to them, part of that was taking that character apart a little bit and getting him to realize that sometimes
he hadn't lived up to this beliefs, either ("Absolute Candor" being the main exemplar of that).
DS9 at least did it in a much better, organic way.
DS9's deconstruction is actually very similar to PIC S1's.
And Picard himself. I could see why he accidently bluffed his way into resigning. But his arc from 2385 to 2399 makes no sense. He just retreats to his vineyard?
Yeah, I believe it. This is a guy who has had immense prestige and influence most of his life, and suddenly he lost. Add to that the immense psychological burden of realizing the consequences of this thing he could not control? I could see him just giving up. It happens to people.
And also -- Jean-Luc does have a history of just giving up when he's overwhelmed. He stood up Jenice for their date in Paris in 2342 because he was afraid of getting in a relationship with her -- mind you, he'd been a captain for almost ten years at that point. And he just gave up and left Starfleet between his court-martial for losing the
Stargazer and the commissioning of the
Enterprise-D.
He doesn't even speak publicly about why he resigned, or use his social cachet to lobby the public to change policy or stand for office himself?
I think it's pretty clear he'd already done everything you just listed short of standing for office himself. It's not like this was just some obscure decision made in the library basement of a small town by village council members. This was a major foreign policy decision that would necessarily have had large numbers of people and organizations fighting on both sides.
At the very least go out and do some archaeology...
"Remembrance" established that he wrote a number of books, including on historical and archaeological topics, during his "wilderness years." It's entirely possible he
did some archaeology. But it wouldn't have been relevant to the story being told, so there wouldn't be any reason to include it.
Minus the swearing and the close-in beheading shots (which could easily be edited out in post, so they aren't structurally inherent to the season's plot) PICARD season 3 really is an evolution from late season DS9 and ENT seasons 3 and 4.
Not really. PIC S3 is still structured using the prestige TV-style serialized character drama format. It doesn't use either the semi-episodic format that ENT S3 and DS9 S6 and S7 mostly used (for DS9, only the "Station Occupation" and "Final Chapter" arcs used a structure similar to the modern serialized character drama), and it's certainly not using the "three-episode mini-arc" structure ENT S4 used.
But season 3 is really good, aligns with prior continuity...
So was PIC S1. And PIC S2 wasn't amazing but it was fun with moments of excellence.
so maybe they'd have liked it even if not personally involved.
I dunno man. All I know is, Doug Drexler changed his tune on hating modern Trek once he got a job, and he's spoken publicly about having initially been hired to work on DIS S1 but then let go when DIS moved production to Toronto. To me, that suggests his opposition is more about sour grapes and his own desire to work on the show than it is about the quality of the show itself. I mean, fuck, Drexler worked on the utter dreck that was ENT Season Two and never dissed it publicly.
Sci said:
cal888 said:
I didn't say he was fired.
Yes you did. You claimed he was "was put on a bus to nowhere after season 1." That's a euphemism for involuntary termination of employment.
&
Sci said:
As far as I am aware, we have no information either way about whether or not Paramount tried to convince Chabon to stay on a showrunner for PIC S2. Literally all we know is that Chabon decided to leave because he wanted to adapt his novel.
More like in the TV Tropes sense, as in to development hell.
Perhaps you have lost track of the flow of the conversation, but let's review and be clear: You falsely claimed that Chabon was "put on a bus to nowhere after season 1." I and others corrected you by pointing out that it was
Chabon's decision to depart as PIC's showrunner because he wanted to develop
The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay for another network. To which you falsely claimed that you didn't claim he was fired, to which I responded by pointing out that "X was put on a bus to nowhere" is a euphemism for involuntary termination of employment. To which you are now responding, "More like in the TV Tropes sense, as in to development hell."
It is entirely possible that
Kavalier and Clay is stuck in development Hell. I wouldn't know. What I
do know is, Chabon is the one who made the decision to depart as PIC's showrunner after production on S1 wrapped in 2019. He was not "put on a bus." He chose to board that bus of his own accord.
And in the past, I've linked to articles where Terry Matalas talked about Michael Chabon's two scripts for season 2, and interpreting the writing credits for 202 over who re-wrote whom, so the guy was around at the beginning of season 2.
None of which means Chabon was forced out or whatever, because writers get re-written and episodes reconceptualized all the time without it meaning anyone's being pushed out. Furthermore, you're not acknowledging the simple fact that
all of season two had to be re-conceptualized and the early episodes re-written because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
But Riker and Troi are legacy characters.
That does not matter. Going into extensive detail about everything they went through with Thad would only have distracted from the
real story of "Nepenthe," which was Jean-Luc and Soji learning to trust and accept each other as ersatz family.
If the producers were going to make a mess of things outside their lane,
The fact that they didn't go into excruciating detail of their struggle to save Thad does not mean they "made a mess of things."
And this one isn't in the deleted scenes, unlike with TITANIC...
I actually didn't know that was a deleted scene from the film -- I was drawing upon my own knowledge of the disaster and hypothesizing a scene that should not have been in the film. I am amused it was filmed, but the fact it was cut confirms my point: going into that kind of detail would have detracted from the story actually being told.
Season 1's Romulans don't really fit with 24th century Romulans from TNG/DS9/VGR.
Sure they do. Narek and Narissa are absolutely in the TNG/DS9 tradition of duplicitous Romulan spy agents. And one of the things that makes PIC S1 brilliant is that
expands upon our understanding of Romulan society by showing us parts of their culture that we never got to see before. Our understanding of Romulan culture pre-PIC was
extremely restricted, limited only to the Romulan ruling class and military leadership.
the LOTR stuff with Elnor.
There is no "LOTR stuff with Elnor." He's a follower of a religious sect that is in opposition to the Romulan ruling class, and he uses a sword. That's not "LOTR stuff."
The Borg cube artefact doesn't go anywhere, despite being an amazing opportunity for worldbuilding in an of itself...
There
is worldbuilding with the Borg Artifact. We learn through the Artifact subplot that there is no more Neutral Zone; that the Romulan Free State is the dominant Romulan government post-Star Empire collapse; that the Romulan Free State still has major tensions with the Federation but is much more cooperative than the Star Empire used to be, up to and including allowing a Federation citizen to run the Borg Reclamation Project and allowing Federation scientists to help them reverse-engineer Borg technology; that XBs are subjected to widespread discrimination and oppression throughout the Alpha Quadrant; that there is a movement of people trying to help XBs; that the Romulan Free State has a stronger system of nominal due process than the Star Empire did, because Tal Shiar agents no longer have the legal authority to unilaterally commandeer vessels or to engage in summary executions; and that the Free State is still struggling to actually
implement those changes because the Tal Shiar is still able to get away with stuff de facto if not de jure. That's quite a bit of worldbuilding!
I do agree that "Et in Arcadia Ego, Part II" doesn't quite stick the landing with the Artifact crashing on Coppellius, Seven killing Narissa, and then the Artifact and the XBs playing no further role. I think it would have been better if the Artifact had played a vital role in the final confrontation with the Tal Shiar fleet.
And the general vibe and visual aesthetic is just off,
No, it's not "off." It's exactly appropriate for the story they're trying to tell. You just don't like it.
whereas at least the 25th century parts of season 2 feel right...
Those 25th Century parts of S2 were set in Starfleet institutions and conveyed the points of view of Starfleet institutionalists. That's what you're reacting to. You don't want to see the galaxy outside of the perspective of Starfleet.
I mean, I guess if they had to cut arcs left and right, they could have made Rios the captain at the beginning of season 3 and just killed him off during the first attack.
Or they could have structured S2 so as to produce a conflict between him and Jean-Luc during S3 that would allow him to serve in the role of "antagonistic Starfleet captain whose ship Picard commandeers" without killing him off.
Santiago Cabrera had opening credits regular billing. Todd Stashwick is a "Guest Star", despite being in every episode so far. So it's likely partly a money thing.
Yeah, Matalas has said money was the restricting factor in bringing back PIC S1-2 characters. To which my response is, save money by writing off Jurati, keep Rios as captain of the
Stargazer but make him a guest star instead of principal character, ditch Ed Speleers for a cheaper actor who
wasn't in the cast of one of the biggest shows of the 2010s and who also actually looks like he's in his 20s (and possibly make Jack's actor a guest star rather than principal cast member if doing so helps you afford Cabrera), keep Data dead and only bring back Spiner for one or two episodes at the end, and also maybe save some money by, for instance, always using your TNG Special Guest Stars in more than one scene in the episodes in which they feature and cutting them out of episodes they don't need to be in (e.g., Frakes's two-second cameo as the Tuvok-Changeling).
The Seven in Starfleet works well on a ship where she has to confront all the regulations a la on VGR.
I'm not convinced that Seven joining Starfleet actually represents the best way to progress that character. Honestly it would make about as much sense for Seven and Raffi to swap positions -- keep Seven as a Fenris Ranger aboard
La Sirena, have Raffi as executive officer aboard the
Stargazer under Rios, and have Seven be the one who investigates the bombing on M'talas Prime and gets recruited by Worf.
Raffi on M'Talas makes sense with her intelligence background. Plus she plays off Worf well. Finally, her character is much better in season 3 than season 1.
I think it would make just as much sense for Seven to be off doing her thing as a Fenris Ranger (since M'Talas Prime isn't part of the Federation). And I personally think Raffi has been infantilized in her scenes with Worf. Her being upset with Jean-Luc for not telling her what he's doing would make more sense than Seven, since she has a much longer relationship with Jean-Luc than Seven did.