I thought it was the worst and kinda for the OPs reason.Four was the best season. It's rare for me to see anyone rank the fourth season as one they hate.
the problem with ENT wasn't that it was radically different, it was that it was radically the same with different window dressingA Trek series produced in the 21st century actually tried an approach that was radically different in every respect from what came before or since and used a modified pop song (originally sung by none other than Rod Stewart and written for a Robin Williams film) as its opening theme. And many fans since haven't stopped complaining.![]()
SNW is a pretty safe remix of what has come before. Likely intentional. Discovery and Pic Seasons 1,2 were riskier approaches but ultimately not as crowd-pleasing. The franchise needed a safe bet to stay afloat, it was SNW.
There isn't much reinvention of the wheel here. Just taking what was once great about episodic Trek, and giving it to us with modern day special effects, identity politics/inclusion, and a more palatable balance of action and dialogue that the 18-35 demos can tolerate.
That's safe? I guess I don't watch enough streaming programming to find that safe because that's what I want.Heavy serialisation, dark colour palette, excessive gore/violence, focus on broken characters & drama, going all-in on scale (Monstrous villains going to destroy the multiverse/all life/...) And absolutely short-changing plot-logic, Sci-fi angles if they don't lead to action, in favour of character drama and BIG EMOTIONS ALL THE TIME.
Yup. That feels extremely safe to me, especially in Star Trek.SNW for me is the more risky approach: A big budget, bright and colourful, episodic tv, trying to be both optimistic and funny, but still serious drama. Not enough action to be like "The Mandalorian". Surprisingly low stakes. High concept episodes with a lot of talking.
I had a similar issue with Enterprise Season 4, which I know most people loved, but I disliked. It feels like they're combing over past Trek's best work and clinging to its shirt tails. In Enterprise it was lore elements like the Klingon ridges, Augments, and Mirror Universe. In SNW it's specific episodes:
It's inherently limiting. It's next to impossible to outdo the thing you're imitating. The best you can achieve is recreating the same feeling as the memory of the original story does. There's no creativity, no originality, no new top-tier stories that can join alongside those of the best of past Trek.
- Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow => City on the Edge of Tomorrow
- Ad Astra per Aspera => Measure of a Man
- The Broken Circle => stealing the Ent from STIII, and plot to ignite a war from STVI
- Those Old Scientists => Trials and Tribble-ations
It's one step above going " 'member this nostalgia inducing-thing?"
STD was 'safe'? The main focus was on the First Officer (not the ship or it's Captain <-- at least untuil the 4th season after numerous fan complaints over the years.)Funny that you mention "safe vs. risky/daring":
Because for me, DIS & PIC have been almost cynically, by-the-numbers following all clichés and tropes of "successful streaming shows":
Heavy serialisation, dark colour palette, excessive gore/violence, focus on broken characters & drama, going all-in on scale (Monstrous villains going to destroy the multiverse/all life/...) And absolutely short-changing plot-logic, Sci-fi angles if they don't lead to action, in favour of character drama and BIG EMOTIONS ALL THE TIME.
SNW for me is the more risky approach: A big budget, bright and colourful, episodic tv, trying to be both optimistic and funny, but still serious drama. Not enough action to be like "The Mandalorian". Surprisingly low stakes. High concept episodes with a lot of talking.
All of that has been done in Trek before - but, like, in the 60s and 80s.
NOTHING about that screams "guaranteed success" to modern producers.
It's not an Action show or what passes as "serious drama". It's a talk-y, plot heavy Sci-fi show with funky visuals. I'm absolutely amazed something like that got produced in the modern age - and IMO only because the "safe", cynical approach has failed twice before.
Exactly so.Count me in the category that finds SNW the most risky of the recent Trek ventures. While I've liked to some degree all of the 2017- era of Trek (except Picard S3), all the live-action shows have worked within general expectations for contemporary serialized television drama. And most of this era seem to me to have a clear sense for how Star Trek works, and to work within that pattern. As much as I like Discovery, even Season 3 and 4 feel highly calculated to keep things within certain Star Trek boundary lines. That's not a criticism, just an observation.
SNW is not patterned to look or unfold like most contemporary big-budget television dramas, in my eyes. It's a throwback, and that in itself is the risk. But it is also happy to revise and adjust things about what Star Trek is and does. It delights in small dramas and domestic scenes, and it adds places and interactions to the world that have some of that weird, experimental quality the franchise hasn't had since TOS. It may use many familiar characters, but they have a verisimilitude and sense of freshness and authenticity that defies, rather feels beholden, to the past. SNW alone among this era feels like it isn't held back by Trek's baggage.
For me, though I respect TOS, I have no nostalgia for it. Yet SNW is the most I've loved a Trek show in probably ever. It's doing something different.
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