Actually, yeah, he was set up to be unlikable but somewhat redeem himself as the series reached its conclusion. He's not for everyone but he was a fascinating study in ethics and people who avoid embracing any but their own unique idea of them.
I'll take your word for it.Actually, yeah, he was set up to be unlikable but somewhat redeem himself as the series reached its conclusion. He's not for everyone but he was a fascinating study in ethics and people who avoid embracing any but their own unique idea of them.
More of an anti-hero. Or a reluctant hero.And he somehow became a hero by the end. A tainted one, stained by years of covert behavior and downright terrible acts, but willingly helped his Federation friends liberate his homeworld and put his life on the line for a new Cardassia, a freer and more open and peaceful one. He was a cunning bastard, but one with a silver lining.
A man of taste and breeding, I see!
I believe that Babylon 5's CGI has a charm all of its own precisely because it's relatively primitive; but compared to other shows with very early CGI, like SeaQuest DSV or Space: Above and Beyond, I think it holds up really well due to superb design work. And of course there's no way they'd have been able to do that show with physical models anyway.
Paramount should replace the shots of the Enterprise in TOS with the Disco/SNW-prise.![]()
This simply isn't a good analogy, because the consumer has no choice in the matter. Just like, now, when watching TOS on OTA/Cable/Streaming TV, all we have are the 2006 versions. If you want the original effects, you have to go and hunt down the home video versions of the show.
Nothing I would love more than to have a 25" color TV and BetaMax and LaserDisc players, and media to enjoy the show. That is just no longer practical for me.
Soon, only the hardest of hard core fans will even know those 60's effects even exist. To me, that is something important being lost.
Art is defined by its limitations. Star Trek was a product of the 1960’s, as such, it should be left alone. If someone wants to put their stamp on it, then just remake it. The work of the 60’s shouldn’t be overwritten just because something newer and flashier comes along.
Are these people who complain about the updated effects on TOS-R watching TOS on an actual 1960s TV to stay true to the original unaltered production intent they prize so much? Or are you watching it on a modern 4K flatpanel with surround sound for that authentic 1966 experience?
ENT Episode Pitch Game
VHS was shit in its time. No, of course it doesn’t work for most people these days. It’s like holding up a dial phone (which you probably still use) and saying ‘Why do we need cellphones? Doesn’t this work for people?”
You are very much an outlier. The exception rather than the rule. The world moved on. You didn’t.
We see Andorians and Tellarites.
A live action version of these characters will be great to see
VHS was not shit in its time.
VHS won over Betamax and Laserdisc because:It absolutely was shit in its time and in its time better alternatives (Betamax and Laserdisc) existed.
3) On a few occasions I had tapes that would somehow ‘blank’ themselves. Either you’d play the tape and there’d be sound or no picture, or both.
It absolutely was shit in its time and in its time better alternatives (Betamax and Laserdisc) existed
Well, Betamax would suffer from tapes getting eaten and quality degradation. Laserdiscs would suffer from disc rot. They all had their shortcomings.
Doesn’t change the fact that it was substandard compared to other options, even if those options themselves were far from optimal.
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