I hated 09 and ID, but I do give it credit for reigniting interest in the franchise. BEYOND, at least, was really, really good.
I don't think that was sustainable, though. At least, not as a series.
Definitely not at a ~$200 million budget with Bad Robot taking a massive upfront production fee!
Case for what? This is absurd. Share your opinions. This popularity contest garbage is smacking of 6th grade bullshit and I would like to belive that Trek could leave that behind. As it stands, it feels very juvenile and does tells not me nothing about what you like. Might as well say, "all the cool kids are doing it."
The case for making a Star Trek: Legacy that hits the notes that PICARD season 3 did that none of the other live action NuTrek seasons had done, and serves the section of the fanbase that has gone underserved otherwise since 2017.
Why would any business consciously alienate a large portion of their own fanbase? What purpose would that serve?
Executives not understanding Star Trek. A new group of creators wanting to put their own stamp on the franchise. Bad market research. Irrational actors. Egos. Not getting the importance of merchandising revenue.
Youtube, which basically thrives on people hating on everything, is not a reliable metric. Rotten Tomatoes isn't either when the reviews for season 3 are a way smaller sample than season 1. User ratings for IMDB are about the same across both seasons.
Videos about things people like also do well. Many behind the scenes interviews about PICARD season 3 have good numbers. Plus people vehemently dislike certain aspects of Star Trek because they love the franchise so much. A comeback story is much more aspiring than more hate click dopamine hit videos anyway.
I want Starfleet Academy and judging by your beloved social media metrics, so do a lot of other people. There's room for SFA and a new 25th century show. It's not either or.
Is there though with Paramount+ belt tightening, and less money to through around in an era of high interest rates? Unfortunately at the moment it's a zero sum game. And since SFA would be tied to DISCOVERY/SNW, that's also the zero sum game of TOS and through that the intercontinuity of everything from 1966-2005 being overwritten.
I'm still waiting to hear how it was a major victory outside of "we got to see everyone together and everyone was happy at the end". What great story beats and storylines did we get out this season? What great character work did we get? Please tell me outside of Troi and Riker, which as said before, was basically all on the actors and that season 1 had set them up a great arc.
- The PICARD arc about never having a family from GEN was followed up
- We got to see an entirely new interplay between Picard and Riker at in different stage in their relationship
- Geordi was shown having a family after all of his bad luck with relationships in TNG
- The bad death of Data from NEM was fixed, with a great fresh new take on the character
- Shaw and Sidney LaForge are the best new characters introduced to Star Trek since 2005... the crew of the USS Titan were believable as Starfleet professionals
- We got the best Star Trek music of the 21st century
- Behind the scenes, we got to see Doug Drexler, the Okudas, and more Berman-era veterans return to the franchise
- The season was a period piece, not set in the "infinite present" of no defined past or future
- Canon/continuity/established lore was respected, especially regarding the TOS Constitution class with the USS New Jersey, while the Locutus DNA alterations, the Borg navigational computer virus, that Section 31 would have needed Changeling prisoners to create the virus from DS9, and even why the Holodeck would have independent power during a crisis all added to existing lore
Often when something is popular, there are valid reasons as to why. While I don't think Matalas is the second coming, I think he is the most competent of all the Nu Trek showrunners, and has a good pulse on the fandom, and knows how to interact with them.
He certainly managed to win over many critics, and this season at least holds up to the average level of quality of any Berman-Trek season.
The only difference is the nostalgia overload of the cast of TNG being back together, with the Enterprise-D thrown in as well. They dangled the nostalgia carrot, and the masses ate it up.
It also got the tone, continuity, verisimilitude largely right. It "felt like Star Trek", not a generic SF show with some Star Trek trappings and CW style dialog. It also offered some nuance.
But was the writing any better? Not really. Half of it was ripping off elements from other films and series, or taking character histories from films completely outside the franchise, as with Shaw.
Almost every plot is bound to have some retreads. The writing wasn't perfect, but it was much improved compared to any other live action NuTrek season I've seen. The serialized arc stayed with what was planned from the beginning, without massive changes mid stream. The season won't be incredibly dated in 5 years. Meanwhile another season had been repeatedly criticized for taking from Mass Effect, Firefly, Alien...
Things that had previously driven certain segments of the fandom crazy, were excused because it was done involving a character they had a previous attachment too.
A lot comes down to writing and execution. The Crusher hid a son plot depends especially on this. It doesn't make perfect sense, but it makes plausible enough sense for the plot to hit that mark then move on.
Picard S3 is "NuTrek." They just painted it an overload of nostalgia, handed out rose coloured glasses.
I'm fine with serialization and characters having some conflict. But I do want the already established tone, continuity etc elements as well.
I feel like if Jack Crusher was on any other Trek show or had any other name and any other parents, he would not being getting as many passes as he's gotten from the fanbase. Also, I hate to say it and open this can of worms, but if he'd been a daughter instead of a son I also feel like the reception would have been much different.
A son or daughter working really depends on the writing, the actor/actress hired, and how they play off Picard. And Soji was already a surrogate daughter, so it made sense here to go with a son.
If by righting the ship you mean a bunch of 90s cast members, familiar music, and familiar production design but many of the same writing tropes as other modern trek shows then sure.
Good aesthetics plus good execution... think back to the ORVILLE vs DISCOVERY debates...
Might it be because the TNG characters are better characters and have more depth than those on Discovery? That maybe more people care about these characters and like watching their interactions with each other more than what the Discovery writers have put forward?
Hell, some of the new characters in season 3 are the best new Star Trek characters in two decades!
Most of the writers behind season 2 were also behind season 3. So I see it as season 3's fault for completely ignoring the conduit.
Again, Akiva Goldsman was the showrunner for season 2. It is common throughout Star Trek history that when a new showrunner takes over, they all introduce plot points that their former boss vetoed. See TNG with the transition from Michael Piller to Jeri Taylor, DS9 with Piller to Ira Steven Behr, VGR with Piller to Taylor to Brannon Braga to Kenneth Biller, and ENT with Braga to Manny Coto.
Plus, as I've mentioned before, it's not so much the success of the season that is turning people off, it's the deification of its production staff, namely Lord Terry Matalas, that has raised eyebrows.
It's his newfound popularity that has persons like myself, worried as to what it will mean for the future of Star Trek.
Paramount could decide to just doubledown on the nostalgia, based on the success of this season and turn the franchise inward on itself and become nothing more then a nostalgia wank fest.
Matalas has pretty much stated that those are his intentions with the franchise.
Why can't we have both? I can't stand DISCOVERY and SNW, and SFA will replace the former. Why can't legacy fans that don't like NuTrek also have their cut of the pie?
Matalas isn't perfect. But like Manny Coto, he came into a bad situation and managed to greatly improve things. And he seems committed to the creative integrity of Star Trek, the importance of continuity, and wants to pick up all the hanging threads from the Berman era instead of hitting the reset button and soft rebooting everything.
If season 3 of Picard is a "nostalgia wank fest," I would argue the past 14 years have been rooted in using nostalgia that turned inward. And that's fine, if you've liked that direction. But let's not pretend that Strange New Worlds isn't as much rooted in watching a set of legacy characters in a familiar setting as Picard season 3 is. The only difference is that Picard keeps the LCARS looking like it did 30 years ago.
Continuation vs reboot. SNW is just not believable set a few years before TOS.