Based on the stretch from early TNG to later DS9, rapid changes in uniforms is pretty common. I like the blue ones, but they may change during the run towards something closer to TOS’ pilot.
Exactly. There has been such a huge variety of uniform changes in Star Trek it is easy to imagine several uniforms being in service at the same time.And we've seen uniforms constantly shifting in the 24th century depending on which show you were watching. On the DS9, the TNG uniforms were standard on starships and Starfleet HQ, with the DS9 colored shoulder uniforms exclusive to the space station (and presumably other stations/outposts). The show was pretty consistent about that, until the First Contact uniforms became the new standard for all Starfleet posts.
Along comes VOY and suddenly it's the DS9 uniforms that are depicted as being the standard uniform on starships and HQ, prior to the First Contact uniform. If VOY had remained consistent to how DS9 depicted uniform usage, we'd see Voyager, Equinox, and HQ officers wearing TNG uniforms instead.
And then there's Generations, which just tosses them altogether.
That all said, it wouldn't be a stretch to assume there are other styles of uniform from what we've seen on DISCO. We may get a nice updated take on the turtleneck pilot uniforms seen in "The Cage" and "Where No Man Has Gone Before".
My own personal head-canon is that "The Companion" found Cochran in his crashed ship, but not in what one would call, perfect condition...Their original casting choice was Tom Hanks, but they had scheduling conflicts with That Thing You Do. Cromwell was a last minute decision that was justified by the strength of his performance over his resemblance to the original actor.
I'll grant that a few scenes (that one most conspicuously) have had a somewhat "symbolic" quality to them.
Thank Goodness that Trump ISN'T a Star Trek fan...I guess Trump is right since he is the official leader of the US. We should follow him without question!
Who knew?!?![]()
See, this strikes me as puzzling. There is a fundamental difference between saying "don't contradict things we already know," and saying "don't tell us anything new that we don't know, because we know everything." Perhaps a few fans here and there have copped the latter attitude, but I can't see why the producers would imagine it's a widespread thing. By far the more widespread concerns I've seen and heard have been in the former category.
Sure, but when someone is offering to give you something your expectations should be based on what THEY think they're giving you, not what you hope you're going to get. So far the producers have been pretty clear that they're talking about those story elements relative to those characters and to the very unique features of Discovery's technology and story elements, namely the Spore Drive, the Klingons, and Burnham. The producers consider those to be the biggest deviations and have pledged that they will be reconciled in due time.
Your response "But what about all the things I consider to be deviations?" is a separate line of questioning.
Truthfully, this show is not meant to literally line up visually with TOS. If that's how you're trying to watch the show, then you're simply watching it wrong. I've accepted that the show's intention is to update the look while treading the general lore of Trek. When the Enterprise showed up, I never once tried to come up with an in-universe explanation for why it looks different from what we saw in TOS. That would be a waste of time. It only looks different because this show has a different visual style from the others. That's all. I move on and try to watch the show on its own terms and hopefully enjoy it.Irregardless of what the Powers That Be chose to address or not address, DSC has continuity errors in the visuals department and those will not go away with the "just ignore it" mantra.
Based on the stretch from early TNG to later DS9, rapid changes in uniforms is pretty common. I like the blue ones, but they may change during the run towards something closer to TOS’ pilot.
My own personal head-canon is that "The Companion" found Cochran in his crashed ship, but not in what one would call, perfect condition...
It/She then proceeded to "repair" him the best she could (with limited knowledge from the ships computers), and make him able to last a lot longer than he normally would have.
Thus the different physical characteristics and younger appearance.
The episode is called "METAMORPHOSIS".
I just figure the title describes his changes as well as Commissioner Nancy Hedford's.
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Circular argument. If everyone concurred on the premise that the continuity issues with DSC only involve "trivial surface details," this thread wouldn't exist in the first place.That analogy doesn't work because there's far more substantial differences between those two Batman films than just trivial surface details.
Almost like they were being outfitted by Hollywood costume designers, huh?From 2254 until 2273 we see no fewer than four different Starfleet duty uniform designs being used aboard starships and at starbases...
In short, Starfleet is one spastic and indecisive organization when it comes to how its members dress.
Cute, but that kind of falls apart when you address that Joe Chill killed Bruce Wayne's parents instead of Jack Napier. Plus, nobody in production ever claimed BEGINS to be a prequel set in the same universe as Burton's film.
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