That's not how it works.The trouble with that ship is that it's so conspiciously out of step with design trends that it's begging for a character to comment on it.
That's not how it works.The trouble with that ship is that it's so conspiciously out of step with design trends that it's begging for a character to comment on it.
Only a Sith deals in absolutes.That sounds like a judgement.
That sounds like a judgement.
Wouldn't have been the first or the last time that a character commented on how a ship looks.That's not how it works.
Not the same thing.Wouldn't have been the first or the last time that a character commented on how a ship looks.
Not always. Plus it was my first reaction to seeing it and I'm not even a Starfleet historian, so it would've been perfectly natural for someone in universe to acknowledge that it's got a retro style.Lampshading tends to suck.
Usually quite obvious and painful.Not the same thing.
Lampshading tends to suck.
For my own curiosity, do you consider throwback designs just generally unlikely (which, for my part, I will usually agree with depending on context) or do you generally just not like such designs at all?
I'm fine with throwback designs, if there's a logical reason for them. For example, baseball and football teams sometimes wear throwback uniforms for fan nostalgia. But they're not meant to be worn regularly. But my rant wasn't so much a diatribe against nostalgia. Rather, that between 50+ years of fandom coming up with a logical design lineage for starships such as the FASA and SFB role playing games, to the actual TV and movie productions post-TOS whose designers like Andy Probert, Rick Sternbach, Michael Okuda etc. have lovingly done the same thing, we've gotten a pretty consistent 'universe' of the gradual advancement of tech over time. It's just that for the last couple of years, production design has become more and more inconsistent because of the obsession with making prequels to things that didn't really need prequels to begin with, the inconsistency of trying to shoehorn in a more modern approach into that same 'universe' that had nothing like that before, and designers that simply don't get it in terms of 'pseudo-historical accuracy' if you get what I mean. There's a reason nobody is making a prequel show to Adam West's Batman using today's production values. In the words of Sidney Powell and Tucker Carlson, no reasonable-thinking person would believe it. And before anyone chimes in with "But it's just artistic interpretation!"...I'm not buying that either. By that logic, Netflix's Lost in Space is also an 'artistic interpretation' of the old LiS, but the producers didn't feel the need to claim it takes place in the same universe as Irwin Allen's.
Now more specifically, my main issue with 'throwback designs' in Trek has to do with the Titan. I don't think it's unreasonable for someone who is savvy about Star Trek tech like me to question why the design of the ship looks so much like something that came from a tech era from 100 years before. If there was a logical reason for it, great. But so far the show itself has not provided one, and all the behind-the-scenes comments by the producers and showrunners haven't convinced me. So, here we are.
Oh, one more thing: while I was on the cruise, I had a habit of asking people I met if they happened to be a member of the TrekBBS. None of them were. You’d think that anyone who actually loves Star Trek that much that they’d pay shitloads of money to be on a cruise ship would be just as anal retentive about Star Trek as a TrekBBS member is…but no.![]()
Probably doesn't, no matter how important we like to think we areI don't know if the hardcore fandom really matters as much as it think it does but really more attracting subscribers and positive word of mouth.
And an even smaller portion of the viewing audience. The vast majority of subscribers simply goes "That was entertaining" and moves on. There's not furor over ship designs, or uniforms, or time lines because it all works well enough for them as a piece of entertainment.We all have different angles from which we appreciate Trek, and that's fine. And we also have different ways to indulge in our Trek cravings, which is also fine. I don't think I would be attracted to such a cruise for example, even though I'm perfectly happy to be a TrekBBS member. But yeah, we're only a tiny minority of all Trek fans.
and designers that simply don't get it in terms of 'pseudo-historical accuracy'
Dude, the designers get it. The producers they work for get it too. They just make different artistic choices because they value things other than aesthetic consistency.
It's essentially the same people who did Season 2.I've loved season 3 so far though. I don't know who is responsible for the incredible turnaround, but give them the keys to the franchise so far as I'm concerned.
Generally speaking, I think this is accurate in some cases.It's essentially the same people who did Season 2.
It's seems to me using more legacy characters forgives a lot of sins.
It's essentially the same people who did Season 2.
It's seems to me using more legacy characters forgives a lot of sins.
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