He was afraid to take any chances or big swings.Berman had two major negatives, IMHO: he kept writing episodes tho he was a terrible writer; and he insisted on boring background music instead of anything interesting or exciting.
He was afraid to take any chances or big swings.Berman had two major negatives, IMHO: he kept writing episodes tho he was a terrible writer; and he insisted on boring background music instead of anything interesting or exciting.
And unwilling to let his series live up to their premise. Voyager wasn't a ship of castsways, it was a pleasure cruise. And Enterprise was a prequel in name only.He was afraid to take any chances or big swings.
Between the two I'd say Enterprise lived up to its premise much better than Voyager did. But yes the technology was still too good.And unwilling to let his series live up to their premise. Voyager wasn't a ship of castsways, it was a pleasure cruise. And Enterprise was a prequel in name only.
And unwilling to let his series live up to their premise. Voyager wasn't a ship of castsways, it was a pleasure cruise. And Enterprise was a prequel in name only.
Berman only wrote two episodes himself, TNG's Brothers and A Matter of Time. All his other writing credits are either story development credit, or co-write. In the case of the scripts he co-wrote, I'm fairly certain the other writer (usually Braga) did the heavy lifting on those scripts.he kept writing episodes tho he was a terrible writer
And Braga was only ever as strong a writer as whoever his writing partner was. He had a few gems to his solo credit, but largely I was not a fan of his work from the start.Berman only wrote two episodes himself, TNG's Brothers and A Matter of Time. All his other writing credits are either story development credit, or co-write. In the case of the scripts he co-wrote, I'm fairly certain the other writer (usually Braga) did the heavy lifting on those scripts.
Braga is a good idea man, IMHO. He came up with some truly interesting, weird plot ideas that made for interesting sci-fi. I like some of his "stranger" contributions to TNG. However, he was more mixed in his ability to deliver a final screenplay, which is a different skillset. As you say, it often depended on whom he was paired with.And Braga was only ever as strong a writer as whoever his writing partner was. He had a few gems to his solo credit, but largely I was not a fan of his work from the start.
Braga is a good idea man, IMHO. He came up with some truly interesting, weird plot ideas that made for interesting sci-fi. I like some of his "stranger" contributions to TNG. However, he was more mixed in his ability to deliver a final screenplay, which is a different skillset. As you say, it often depended on whom he was paired with.
Soon will be making another run...Voyager wasn't a ship of castsways, it was a pleasure cruise.
Except Voyager was the Anti-Love Boat. Despite them expecting a decades-long journey, which would make sense for the ship to go generational, only one couple is married and only two children are born (one from a pre-existing pregnancy). I wonder if Neelix was putting some kind of sexual inhibitor in the leola root stew.Soon will be making another run...
What about Kathryn Janeway & Tom Paris Salamander 3x OffSpring that got abandoned on that planet?Except Voyager was the Anti-Love Boat. Despite them expecting a decades-long journey, which would make sense for the ship to go generational, only one couple is married and only two children are born (one from a pre-existing pregnancy). I wonder if Neelix was putting some kind of sexual inhibitor in the leola root stew.
They were spawned off of Voyager. The four Borg kids would be more relevant, since they were actually on the ship for a time.What about Kathryn Janeway & Tom Paris Salamander 3x OffSpring that got abandoned on that planet?
Interested in hearing more about this, because I'd peg Voyager as probably the Star Trek series that suffers least from this. The only things I can think of that you could mean are Neelix's treatment of Kes very early on (definitely a blackmark on the show, albeit one the show itself tries to address later) and the treatment of Seven in the earliest part of season four, which is very clearly a network-imposed thing that the writers manage to push through by the mid-point of the season.Voyager was a milquetoast copy and waste of potential. Filled with gimmicks and subtle and not so subtle sexism
And even then, most of his writing credits are for ENT. He barely wrote anything for TNG, DS9, or VOY.Berman only wrote two episodes himself, TNG's Brothers and A Matter of Time. All his other writing credits are either story development credit, or co-write. In the case of the scripts he co-wrote, I'm fairly certain the other writer (usually Braga) did the heavy lifting on those scripts.
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