tastes differ of courseI'm glad they did hear the audience and change DSC because damn, it needed a lot of those changes. Seasons 3 and 4 were greatly improved and actually outclassed most of the episodes in the concurrent seasons of PIC.
tastes differ of courseI'm glad they did hear the audience and change DSC because damn, it needed a lot of those changes. Seasons 3 and 4 were greatly improved and actually outclassed most of the episodes in the concurrent seasons of PIC.
Hey, they spent $1 million on a not aired pilot and they needed to get some use out of that expenditure. Only took them another 50 years to make Spock's motivations for his actions in The Menagerie (and many other plot points of that story make sense.)As early as "The Menagerie, Part I" in 1967 Trek was mining its past. And it had the cojones to mine a past that nobody outside NBC executives had yet seen!
Star Trek was founded on “mining” the past. Most TOS episodes have antecedents in myth, literature and fable.
Andor Season 1 proved this isn't really requiredHere's a controversial take: all franchises mine their pasts and if the idea for what they want to mine to recycle with a new skin is worthwhile then they should. All entertainment franchises go back to the well to relive past glories. That's part of their nature and it's baked in to the very fabric of those films and/or television series.
Indeed. If a franchise does it too much its bad. If it does it too little it's not real "Trek/Wars/Who/etc."Here's a controversial take: all franchises mine their pasts and if the idea for what they want to mine to recycle with a new skin is worthwhile then they should. All entertainment franchises go back to the well to relive past glories. That's part of their nature and it's baked in to the very fabric of those films and/or television series.
Andor Season 1 proved this isn't really required
And its prequel to a previous movie and makes use of a whole slew of movie tropes.But even it reuses some elements from the rest of the franchise and in far smarter ways than streaming Trek. There aren't many callbacks and Easter eggs but the ones they use - Mon Mothma, Melshi, Saw Gerrera, Colonel Yularen - are all well-used, organic to the overall narrative and not just thrown in there as continuity wank.
Andor Season 1 proved this isn't really required
There are fans I see who let it impact that enjoyment too. It's amazing how one little thing derails the enjoyment.Only the movie and TV snobs care so much about "originality" and "freshness" that they'll make or break their desire to watch something over those factors. Most people don't care nor should they.
For that matter, a lot of TOS episodes were pastiches of popular culture. "Balance of Terror" was a pastiche of the 1957 film The Enemy Below. "The Enemy Within" is a pastiche of Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. "The Conscience of the King" wears its Shakespearean influences on its sleeve -- it's a sci-fi pastiche of Hamlet. "Court Martial" is a pastiche of every naval trial story ever told. "A Piece of the Action" is a pastiche of 1930s gangster films. "The Cage" is a pastiche of Forbidden Planet, which is itself a pastiche of The Tempest. "Elaan of Troyius" is a mash-up of The Taming of the Shrew and Pygmalion/My Fair Lady.
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