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Poll Do you consider Discovery to truly be in the Prime Timeline at this point?

Is it?

  • Yes, that's the official word and it still fits

    Votes: 194 44.7%
  • Yes, but it's borderline at this point

    Votes: 44 10.1%
  • No, there's just too many inconsistencies

    Votes: 147 33.9%
  • I don't care about continuity, just the show's quality

    Votes: 49 11.3%

  • Total voters
    434
In the early days of color TV, everything was excessively colorful to show it off. I suppose it's only natural that in the early days of HD TV, everything is excessively intricate. Naturally, if TOS was made now it would follow current design trends.
 
Hopefully the lighting would be better than what we see on DSC. Like the series or not, it is not a particularly attractive nor inviting world.
 
They do look like TV production sets... for the 1960s, to be viewed on small fuzzy TV sets. I'm sure it looked pretty spiffy back in the day, but those days are over.

They still look spiffy to me and many others. Far more creative than anything that Discovery has given us. Tons of money doesn't equate to creative quality.
 
I can pretty much guarantee you that if Gene Rodenberry had access to the kind of resources the producers of Discovery currently have, he would not have made the same design choices.
Why give GR credit there? All he really did was sign off on design choices made by Matt Jefferies, with some minor input along the way.

DSC doesn't have a Matt Jefferies. That's one of its big problems. Put the resources you're talking about in the hands of someone with talent and dedication comparable to Jefferies, or even to Andy Probert or Rick Sternbach, and we'd have a much better looking show.

Right. Because the answers the show IS interested in answering all involve Burnham/Sarek, the Spore Drive and the Klingon War. Those are the things the producers consider important.
If that really is what the producers think (and I stress again that this is just your supposition), then they have a very skewed perspective, because as I've said, one of those things poses no actual questions, another is a done deal, and the third they're just kicking down the road.

The same explanations [re: cloaking] that would reconcile Enterprise work just as well for Discovery.
No, they really wouldn't. I already explained why.

WebLurker said:
Visuals are factually a part of continuity
Only within the context of a single production. Not between sequels and prequels.
That's a pretty esoteric exercise in hairsplitting. According to whom? You accuse WebLurker of making up his own rules, and then you turn around and do exactly that yourself.

The Star Trek of the 60's was a classic product of its time as well as being limited by the technology and effects available, not forgetting the limited budget as well.

I am sure it looked amazing when it was shown, not surprising that it hasn't aged well really.
It had state-of-the-art effects at the time, and a very large budget compared to other television productions. People seem to keep forgetting this. It did indeed look amazing. When "Where No Man" was screened to attendees at the 1966 WorldCon, before the show premiered, people were blown away and astonished that it was a TV show, because they thought it looked like a motion picture.

What perplexes me is why people say it "hasn't aged well." The show still looks gorgeous today. Anyone who thinks otherwise is so acclimated to contemporary production techniques and CGI FX that they lack the ability to look beyond them. I swear, it's like some people out there never watch anything filmed before they were born.

It wouldn't look anything like the old show if it was done now for obvious reasons like technology advancement and also the many political and social changes we have seen since the 60s.
Well, sure. It would be a completely different show, obviously, and not just in looks. It would be as different as Babylon 5 was in the '90s or The Expanse today. But it's kind of pointless to speculate about. Like any show that actually exists, Star Trek is defined by its history.

The only reason Discovery looks and feels the way it does is because of what has gone before.
But DSC doesn't look and feel very much like what has gone before... that's the point people keep making. Nor does it feel like something new and groundbreaking and innovative, as in the paragraph above. It feels like a mishmash. Among other things it looks derivative of Mass Effect, as people keep pointing out, and that's just... sad.
 
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They still look spiffy to me and many others.
That's the problem, it's only a small group.

This isn't ROGUE ONE where you can get away with replicating the set of a 1970s film. That worked because those set designs were meant to be seen projected on large screens. A long running television show replicating TOS in the manner of "In a Mirror, Darkly" wouldn't work.

Maybe if DISCOVERY had still been just an anthology season as Fuller originally intended CBS may have felt more comfortable with replicating the old 60s sets as they'd view it as just a one-off rather than a potentially long-running show.
 
This isn't ROGUE ONE where you can get away with replicating the set of a 1970s film. That worked because those set designs were meant to be seen projected on large screens. A long running television show replicating TOS in the manner of "In a Mirror, Darkly" wouldn't work.

I'm not sure how projecting them on a larger screen somehow mitigates the age of the designs?
 
Heck, if Roddenberry had modern tools to work with, we may well have ended up with a red-skinned Mr. Spock who ate energy through a plate in his stomach. We'd probably also have love instructors, three-breasted alien women and many other things that would've been a no-go in the 60's.
Luc Besson's Star Trek.
 
Like it or not, DISCOVERY has now changed the rules. There are now two visual styles of the TOS era. That is the way things are now.

It's still a problem "in universe." That's not going to go away unless addressed.

Cool, but the rules you're pointing out are the ones YOU made up. The Emperor has her own rules, and hers are probably more important than yours.

I'm citing the rules they set up.

Only within the context of a single production. Not between sequels and prequels.

That's not how Star Trek has done it before. Nor Star Wars. or the Lord of the Rings/Hobbit movies. (Also see above; even a reimagining on purpose still creates a continuity error.)

This is why fans bringing up episodes like "In a Mirror, Darkly" doesn't prove anything. It's a one-off episode that serves as a fun throwback, not an entire series. And even in that episode characters poke fun at the aesthetics because it obviously looked ridiculous in 2005, especially after having gotten used to the aesthetics of ENTERPRISE.

How does it prove nothing if it's a consistent rule? (Also, I don't recall any characters poking fun at the older designs in those episodes; e.g. Dax loving the TOS tricorder, mirror Trip marveling at how advanced the TOS ships were in comparison to the ENT ones, etc.).
 
This isn't ROGUE ONE where you can get away with replicating the set of a 1970s film. That worked because those set designs were meant to be seen projected on large screens.
Those set designs (and ships and costumes) look like a kludgy hodgepodge, on any size screen. They did in 1977, and they still do today. The only reason the current SW films are using them is because some people have a sentimental attachment to them.

(And that's fine, BTW. Appealing to the nostalgia of Star Wars fans is a perfectly sensible and legitimate thing to do. Other people who are not particularly SW fans, like me, will either like the films or not on their own merits, but they're not going to base that decision on the fact that the visuals have "1970s" written all over them. That's simply the visual aesthetic of SW; it's part of the franchise's identity; it comes with the territory. The pity here is that Trek producers aren't willing to take a comparable approach.)
 
I'm not sure how projecting them on a larger screen somehow mitigates the age of the designs?

My point is that TOS was designed to be viewed on small fuzzy TV sets at the time it came out. This is why TOS was designed and lit the way it was. Today with TV sets three times larger and with higher definition there's a greater expectation for more intricate sets and lighting. I would have loved to see DISCOVERY be closer to the aesthetics of TOS than it currently is, but I know had they gone that direction there would have still been changes to make it more suitable for modern audiences.

It's still a problem "in universe." That's not going to go away unless addressed.

It's not a problem for me, and I don't need it to be addressed because I know the answer.

I'm citing the rules they set up.

And guess what, the rules have changed.

That's not how Star Trek has done it before. Nor Star Wars. or the Lord of the Rings/Hobbit movies. (Also see above; even a reimagining on purpose still creates a continuity error.)

STAR WARS and LORD OF THE RINGS are works of cinema with far more intricate set designs. TOS wasn't.

How does it prove nothing if it's a consistent rule?

Again, rules change. DISCOVERY did that. I've moved on with that.

(Also, I don't recall any characters poking fun at the older designs in those episodes; e.g. Dax loving the TOS tricorder, mirror Trip marveling at how advanced the TOS ships were in comparison to the ENT ones, etc.).

HOSHI: What are you wearing?
(Archer is in a green top with gold braid.)
ARCHER: I found it in the Captain's wardrobe.
HOSHI: These people had some strange ideas about uniforms.

Trip marveling at how advanced the ship is isn't the same as marveling at the aesthetics.
 
Those set designs (and ships and costumes) look like a kludgy hodgepodge, on any size screen. They did in 1977, and they still do today. The only reason the current SW films are using them is because some people have a sentimental attachment to them.

I doubt the Star Wars films are using the old designs "only" because "some people" have a sentimental attachment to them.

(And that's fine, BTW. Appealing to the nostalgia of Star Wars fans is a perfectly sensible and legitimate thing to do. Other people who are not particularly SW fans, like me, will either like the films or not on their own merits, but they're not going to base that decision on the fact that the visuals have "1970s" written all over them. That's simply the visual aesthetic of SW; it's part of the franchise's identity; it comes with the territory. The pity here is that Trek producers aren't willing to take a comparable approach.)

They can't take a comparable approach because the 1960s TOS sets that were designed for television are not comparable with the 1970s STAR WARS sets designed for cinematic viewing. It's really that simple.
 
Why give GR credit there? All he really did was sign off on design choices made by Matt Jefferies, with some minor input along the way.
It was Rodenberry who insisted on the Enterprise having windows, over the explicit objections of Jeffries. It was also Rodenberry who sided with the model makers in the various arguments they had when Jeffries kept insisting on them not adding additional surface details to the ship. Rodenberry wanted more detail, and at times changed his mind on what those details should be. They were, however, pressed for time and trying to stay within a budget so there were only so many things they could change with the resources they had. As it happens, just getting the nacelle caps to light up turned out to be a pretty major modification.

Imagine what the arguments would have been like if they had access to 3D animation software!

DSC doesn't have a Matt Jefferies.
Well, it has a John Eaves, which isn't too different.

More importantly, it doesn't have an Andrew Probert. And THAT is a serious deficiency IMO.

If that really is what the producers think (and I stress again that this is just your supposition), then they have a very skewed perspective, because as I've said, one of those things poses no actual questions, another is a done deal, and the third they're just kicking down the road.
To be honest, NONE of the things you mentioned pose any actual questions. The only one that might is the cloaking device, but it's a question Discovery inherited from Enterprise.

That's a pretty esoteric exercise in hairsplitting. According to whom?
According to every TV and film producer who decided to change the visuals between prequels/sequels? Meaning, basically, all of them.

Also according to J. Michael Strazynski and George Lucas who retroactively changed the visuals effects of their own shows/movies because the technology evolved from the original production.

Also according to everyone involved in TOS-R.

Also according to everyone involved in the Director's Cut of "Star Trek: The Motion Picture."

There's no rule saying that visuals are NOT part of continuity. There's just a near-universal tendency of producers to treat them as if they're not.

What perplexes me is why people say it "hasn't aged well." The show still looks gorgeous today. Anyone who thinks otherwise is so acclimated to contemporary production techniques and CGI FX that they lack the ability to look beyond them.
That's literally what "hasn't aged well" means. It isn't all that impressive when compared to contemporary productions.

Compare "2001: A Space Odyssey" for an example of a 1960s science fiction production that HAS aged relatively well.

Among other things it looks derivative of Mass Effect
That's because Mass Effect is highly derivative of Star Trek. That a high-budget TV series would manage to resemble something that goes out of its way to imitate it shouldn't be all that surprising.
 
Among other things it looks derivative of Mass Effect, as people keep pointing out, and that's just... sad.
It this were true, I would not watch Discovery.
Well, sure. It would be a completely different show, obviously, and not just in looks. It would be as different as Babylon 5 was in the '90s or The Expanse today. But it's kind of pointless to speculate about. Like any show that actually exists, Star Trek is defined by its history.
So, shouldn't Discovery be allowed to be defined current production values as well as its own history? I mean, there seems to be this attitude that Star Trek has never changed before or that all changes were regarded as positive. :shrug:
 
I would have loved to see DISCOVERY be closer to the aesthetics of TOS than it currently is, but I know had they gone that direction there would have still been changes to make it more suitable for modern audiences.
We can agree on this much, at least. Except for that final word... I get tired of the way people blame the show's look on (entirely hypothetical and speculative) audience expectations. I'd say the producers could (and would) have modified the original designs to be more suitable for modern production and broadcast technologies. That would've been just fine.

(Hell, the current Star Wars movies do that much, while still retaining the basic look of the originals.)

What DSC actually did design-wise changed things up way more than that, however... and not in ways that offer any obvious improvement.
 
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