I guess I’m a Herbert, because it doesn’t reach me.Same. Way to Eden is fantastic. Let's have more of that.
Granted, I’ll watch The Way to Eden before a lot of the other series’ duds. Even TOS’ duds have something to offer, no matter how small.
I guess I’m a Herbert, because it doesn’t reach me.Same. Way to Eden is fantastic. Let's have more of that.
It has some excellent world building around the idea of the Federation and the colonies. It's really interesting in reaction to new technology. It's fascinating in a sociological sense.I guess I’m a Herbert, because it doesn’t reach me.
Granted, I’ll watch The Way to Eden before a lot of the other series’ duds. Even TOS’ duds have something to offer, no matter how small.
Kurtzman-era Trek is full of unforced, easily avoidable errors where they tried to "fix" what wasn't broken. The Kling-Orcs, making such a mess of continuity they abandoned a series' original premise, many of the PICARD season 1 backstories where characters fell into grim-darkness... For me anyway, the "JL" thing is an example of them not getting the Picard character, or at the very least not appreciating just how many people it would ruffle feathers with.At the beginning of 2020, the only other New Trek (I refuse to spell it the other way) that existed was the Kelvin Films (which I no longer consider New Trek), Discovery, and Short Treks. In none of them, do they refer to a character by their initials. So Raffi calling Picard "JL" definitely wasn't a "New Trek thing", it was a Raffi thing.
Fair enough. But, for what it's worth, James Duff wrote the final draft of the "Remembrance" teleplay, rewriting Akiva Goldman's earlier draft. Chabon just has co-story credit. Shame James Duff didn't stay in the writing staff.As far as Michael Chabon: he wrote "Calypso" and "Remembrance" which, to this day, are still respectively my first and second favorite pieces of Star Trek ever put out during the Kurtzman Era. Period. So, yes, I do think he's the best writer of New Trek. Which is NOT a knock on anyone else, including Terry Matalas, but someone has to come in first. So, it's the one who wrote my favorite installments in this production era.
I find most of those cringe as well, but I would swap out "The Way to Eden" with "And the Children Shall Lead". TWTE is more "Spock's Brain" level of being somewhat bad but still watchable and enjoyable.You know what’s cringe?
Space hippies taking over the Enterprise with extended musical performances. Code of Honor. The first Ferengi episode. Beverly Crusher fucking a Scottish ghost candle. The entirety of Threshold. Those are cringe.
Really?Kurtzman-era Trek is full of unforced, easily avoidable errors where they tried to "fix" what wasn't broken.
That isn’t how writing on a TV show works. While Duff may have gotten the sole credit for writing the basic draft that was approved for pre-production and filming, everyone on the writing staff had hands in punching the script up for successive drafts and revisions. No TV script is ever the work of a single person these days.Fair enough. But, for what it's worth, James Duff wrote the final draft of the "Remembrance" teleplay, rewriting Akiva Goldman's earlier draft. Chabon just has co-story credit. Shame James Duff didn't stay in the writing staff..
I think they planted that, so they'd have the option to make further changes, potentially, and blame it on the Temporal War. It's along the lines of what I was already leaning towards anyway.The only “fix” I thought was pointless was Goldsman changing the time placement of the Eugenics Wars from the 90s to the 21st century. I’m not upset over the change (I couldn’t care less when the Eugenics Wars happened) I just think it’s weird that it bugged him so much that he was compelled to have an episode “fix” that. Like, guy, you only get ten episodes a season. Why does the Eugenics War even matter for a show set in the 23rd century?
To bring it in line with our history mWhy does the Eugenics War even matter for a show set in the 23rd century?
Kurtzman-era Trek is full of unforced, easily avoidable errors where they tried to "fix" what wasn't broken. The Kling-Orcs, making such a mess of continuity they abandoned a series' original premise, many of the PICARD season 1 backstories where characters fell into grim-darkness...
The only “fix” I thought was pointless was Goldsman changing the time placement of the Eugenics Wars from the 90s to the 21st century. I’m not upset over the change (I couldn’t care less when the Eugenics Wars happened) I just think it’s weird that it bugged him so much that he was compelled to have an episode “fix” that. Like, guy, you only get ten episodes a season. Why does the Eugenics War even matter for a show set in the 23rd century?
I think that's a very myopic view of the episode. "Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow" was not an episode dedicated to changing the date for the Eugenics Wars. That was not the dramatic core of the story.
Discovery has been a series about escalating stakes. Those stakes can only be escalated so high and only so much can be shaken up when the show takes place right before TOS. For DSC, TOS was like a glass ceiling. Which is why I agree with the time-jump, besides loving "Calypso" so much. I like the time-jump because I think it freed up the series to reach its true potential. The premise is the Spore Drive and Discovery making discoveries as it's travelled through space, time, and dimension.
The Klingon makeup is the easiest thing to work around. Klingons hate having smooth foreheads. I refuse to believe that they didn't try anything to fix the smooth foreheads before TMP. The Disco Klingons were an attempt to fix the Augment Virus that went too far, so the Klingon Scientists and Doctors went back the drawing board. "What took so long, you might ask?" Martok said it himself, "Klingons make excellent warriors but terrible doctors." He said it, not me. So I don't view it as a continuity error. If you want something to work, you'll find a way to make it work. If you don't want to to work, you'll reject explanation after explanation after explanation, because you don't want it to work. You want what they did to be rejected.
I became a fan of Star Trek in 1991. They didn't explain the Klingon Forehead Issue until 2005. So, for 14 years, I was a fan without any official explanation. I didn't think, "Oh! I can't watch this! This is terrible! They changed the Klingon makeup! Oh no!" That's not how I thought during the '90s or early-'00s.
If I don't like something in Star Trek, it's not going to be because of anything like that. It's going to be either because I don't like the writing of an episode, or the premise of the series doesn't interest me, or -- in the case of the late-Berman Era -- I think it became stale. My yardstick is, "Does this make me sound like Comic Book Guy?" If the answer's yes, then I'm the wrong track.
I don't think Alex Kurtzman was lying. I think they fully intended for DSC to be a visual reboot, but then realized that would be a problem when they decided to do PIC, if they ever had Worf. The chances of Worf looking like a Disco Klingon were exactly zero. So the backtracking began as early as DSC S2. Michael Dorn never would've agreed to it.(Edit: Sorry for double reply, just replying to Lord Garth)
To be fair, the original conceit for why the Klingons looked the way they did in Disco didn’t have anything to do with canon, but was simply a creative decision to make that look the show’s standard for Klingons, much like how Pike’s Enterprise looks the way it does rather than being a recreation of the 60s set. It was the same thing with TMP saying “this is what they look like in our production, there’s no canon explanation”. The filmmakers wanted to present their own take and didn’t expect fans to be so vocal about it, or at least underestimated how vocal they would be. And I think that’s fine. It’s their show. They aren’t obligated to take Okuda’s documentarian approach from the Rick Berman era of “if it looked like that, then it is like that”.
But then Kurtzman pivots and makes up a lie about “oh, they’re bald because they shave their heads during a time of war, I totally forgot to mention that in S1, my bad.”
I don't like accusing people of lying. But Kurtzman’s explanation just doesn’t work with what was presented in his show and I’m dismayed he even thought his explanation would be sufficient. He could have simply said “we tried something different and creatively fulfilling, but the fans spoke up and didn’t like it, so we’re backing away from that aesthetic”. I would have respected that kind of answer. Honest and humble. But he does these doubling downs of “oh I meant to do that”, and then SNW presents war flashbacks with the Klingons looking like traditional Klingons rather than the bald elongated head guys.
So, how do I resolve these canon discrepancies? Simple, I just don’t. They’re not really that important to me. I never even needed that Enterprise two-parter. I always felt that was a waste of time there done for the Ex Astris Scientia folks who want to treat the Trek world as if it’s as tangible and consistent as our own reality.
I don't think Alex Kurtzman was lying. I think they fully intended for DSC to be a visual reboot, but then realized that would be a problem when they decided to do PIC, if they ever had Worf. The chances of Worf looking like a Disco Klingon were exactly zero. So the backtracking began as early as DSC S2.
Man, I hope not.Makes me wonder if we’ll see them in S5 of DISCO finally. I’m curious of what the state of the Klingons is in the 32nd century.
A lot of people have stepped away though... reference the informal viral campaign to get people that were burned to come back and give PICARD season 3 a chance.Disgruntled fans, vocal as they are, don't have as much power as they think. Outraged Fans only make up a tiny, though vocal, minority of the total viewership. And a good thing too, because otherwise nothing would get made.
Worse still for them, they can be counted on to keep watching no matter what. Most of them lack the ability to stop. They'll keep watching long after the point where I'll have stepped away.
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