Unless you have any sci-fi cons of variable quality on the calendar you should be ok...If any of you hear of coming to Boise please let me know so I can get out of town. Thanks in advance!
Unless you have any sci-fi cons of variable quality on the calendar you should be ok...If any of you hear of coming to Boise please let me know so I can get out of town. Thanks in advance!
Latest donor emails: Alec served Shawn O'Halloran with a restraining order, reshoots November 20-21, and you can buy Battlestar Galactica patches from Propworx.
I've never read the whole Axanar script, but from what I've heard about it, all this drama is probably more entertaining anyhow.That's the content donors want...
Quite. But my question was asked in a particular context.It's not.
OK, I have fixed the missing link so you can lift the restraining order.Now I have to restrain myself from pointing out the word you left out.
I'm not sure it is just the writing, though obviously that was mentioned. I think it is just dissatisfaction and when modern Trek isn't doing that then they go to other places. Axanar is not good writing-period. But, it offers up a very nice looking package that caters to the need for modern Trek to look like old Trek.Quite. But my question was asked in a particular context.
If you follow the bouncing ball through the thread, the apparent context was (paraphrasing, not a direct quote), "Fans of Axanar don't group together because of real-world politics, what they have in common is that they think that the writing in modern Star Trek sucks."
The implied subtext of my question is, "Why are people who are dissatisfied with the writing in contemporary Star Trek flocking to Axanar? If they find good writing represented in the script for Axanar, what about it do they see as good? Or is it that Axanar is drawing them in for reasons besides its writing, and if that is the case then just what is the draw?"
I suspect that's getting close to the mark. yeah.I'm not sure it is just the writing, though obviously that was mentioned. I think it is just dissatisfaction and when modern Trek isn't doing that then they go to other places. Axanar is not good writing-period. But, it offers up a very nice looking package that caters to the need for modern Trek to look like old Trek.
Now, that is entirely a generalization, but my recent observations have been seeing a lot people wanting Trek to look a certain way.
This does appear to be the perspective, yes. And, as you note, the fans have a deep devotion to this franchise which makes them far more sensitive to the lack of continuity within the product. Which is why I think things like Axanar hit so close to home is because there is a passion for the product in fan productions that is going to be lacking in CBS productions. And, honestly, I think that passion covers a multitude of sins because they at least appear to care while CBS does not.Clearly in some circles, beyond just the look, there's also the desire for new Trek to dovetail seamlessly into the original continuity, i.e. without significant retcons.
Was there a story in Prelude?Is Axanar good writing? I'm no judge, but after trying to watch Discovery, and giving up on it, I thought Prelude to Axanar was a good story, and looked great. Again, I'm no critic, but it appeared better than some of the Trek I've seen from Hollywood. Can you please everyone all the time? No, but to me any decent Trek is better than no Trek at all.
I thought so, the rise of Earth on the interstellar stage, how the expansion of the Federation irritated the Klingons, basically the lead up to part two with character development in a documentary like format. How the diversity of the different Federation races and their differing fighting tactics frustrated the Klingons...Was there a story in Prelude?
Everything you've mentioned there, except the characters being interviewed for the documentary, is backstory in Prelude, not story.I thought so, the rise of Earth on the interstellar stage, how the expansion of the Federation irritated the Klingons, basically the lead up to part two with character development in a documentary like format. How the diversity of the different Federation races and their differing fighting tactics frustrated the Klingons...
A story nonetheless. Point is, I liked it, other people's mileage may vary.Everything you've mentioned there, except the characters being interviewed for the documentary, is backstory in Prelude, not story.
No problem. Some of us were just curious what people found appealing about Axanar (and/or Prelude). You like the backstory.Point is, I liked it, other people's mileage may vary.
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