-- remember what a flop Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow was?
I actually really liked that movie.....
-- remember what a flop Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow was?
I actually really liked that movie.....
It was meant to be our future, but look more like a submarine. They are things that are more primitive than in TOS, like the cramped quarters and radar-like sensors.
The problem for me isn't really that they were too advanced per se, but that they seemed to advance pretty quickly to a point where there was virtual parity with many of their neighbours and the next century, which should have represented a period of massive technological progress, seemingly resulted in a ship which was incrementally more powerful but fundamentally similar.
The Romulan War, the Founding of the Federation, the technological exchanges that followed, the en masse scientific research driven by the seminal intervening years should be what led to the level of tech we see in TOS, whereas what in fact we see is something approaching that level in the ENT era with a larger, more polished version in TOS.
Note this has nothing to with "looking retro" or reflecting the feel of the times in which the show was made, it's about an in universe technological trend which seems to have surged in order to meet the needs of the plot in the ENT era and then levelled off somewhat afterwards.
For me I wanted ENT to be much more primitive than it was and more so to maintain that throughout, with just occasionally the odd mention of "theoretical" tech we see reach maturity in other series.
The huge leaps in tech should have only come after the founding of The Federation and the exchange of technology and ideas that would have resulted.
I agree!Does anyone else think that "Star Trek: Enterprise" was too advanced for the 22nd Century?
From the sleek starship design of the Enterprise NX-01, which should have been more retro or more inline toward the pre-Constitution class, rather than the Akira-class looking one we got, to the 24th century style rank pips. Why would they use 24th century style rank rips? Couldn't the designers come up with a different rank pips for that period?
The uniforms were also wrong and ugly for the period. Should have been more like "The Cage" style era uniforms or completely different.
To the inside of the Enterprise itself. I think it was still far too sleeker. Although it did have push buttons like the Constitution class starship, the monitors and that were too advanced. The bridge resembled that of NASA control room.
Also, why did Captain Archer have a ready-room when Captain Kirk did not? They should have held their meetings in a briefing room or something similar.
It should've gone backwards, but instead they were stuck in the same 24th century style era. I think you can thank Rick Berman and Brannon Braga for that.
I hope non of my points were previously mentioned before.
Oh for sure... on Enterprise, they should have had plasma pistols, not phase pistols... MAYBE give them phase cannons in season 2 or 3 for the ship itself, and no photonic torpedoes, just the regular high velocity missiles they started off with.
The huge leaps in tech should have only come after the founding of The Federation and the exchange of technology and ideas that would have resulted.
But there's all that space in between that we hardly ever explored in any of the other series... All that stuff that became "the Federations backyard" basically. Like others have said before, we had a lot of one-off or background alien species over the years that hardly ever got any fleshing out, which would have given us ripe opportunities to explore. The Rigelians, The Andorians, First contact with the Tholians! Tellarites, Caitians... We could have spent the series getting to know those lesser known species in greater detail as if they were brand new, because they were hardly untouched.
ENT did plenty with the Andorians, and also developed the Vulcans more fully than any series since TOS at least. They featured the Tellarites starting late in season 2 and more prominently in season 4. Rigel X was visited in the pilot episode, although we didn't see a species identified as Rigelians until season 4. The Tholians were briefly encountered in season 2 (and seen in the Mirror Universe in season 4, along with a Gorn). No Caitians, but season 1 gave us several species only named and never seen in TOS, including Axanar, Malurians, and Coridanites, and season 4 introduced the Orions. (Also the Organians, supposedly, although its Organians didn't act anything like the ones from "Errand of Mercy.")
I don't understand this complaint.We also spent an entire season dealing with an alien race we had never heard of before, along with a conflict (TCW) that we had never heard of. Lot's of wasted potential for the era they were in.
I'm sorry but I would not have liked that at all.I agree!
One of the things that did put me off the series, other than my initial dislike for a pre-TOS series and the screwing up of established Trek history was that it did ooked too advanced.
If they wanted to do a pre-TOS series, then it should have looked more like TOS, the same computers, replicators, uniforms, yes EVERYTHING should have looked like TOS, maybe even more primitive.
Instead we got a ship which looked more like 24th century Voyager than a pre-TOS ship.
I'm aware of that. I'm speaking of specifically how they were integrated into the storytelling. As such they were often, with the exception of the Andorians, Tellarites, and Vulcans, completely interchangable aliens-of-the-week just as with Voyager. We also spent an entire season dealing with an alien race we had never heard of before, along with a conflict (TCW) that we had never heard of. Lot's of wasted potential for the era they were in.
My main complaint with the TCW is that it wasn't handled well. It was set up and then had no pay off, just different factions that the audience doesn't know about fighting over (fill in the blank). I mean, the leader talking with the Suliban didn't even have a name-just "Future Guy."I'm aware of that. I'm speaking of specifically how they were integrated into the storytelling. As such they were often, with the exception of the Andorians, Tellarites, and Vulcans, completely interchangable aliens-of-the-week just as with Voyager. We also spent an entire season dealing with an alien race we had never heard of before, along with a conflict (TCW) that we had never heard of. Lot's of wasted potential for the era they were in.
My main complaint with the TCW is that it wasn't handled well. It was set up and then had no pay off, just different factions that the audience doesn't know about fighting over (fill in the blank). I mean, the leader talking with the Suliban didn't even have a name-just "Future Guy."
Instead we got a ship which looked more like 24th century Voyager than a pre-TOS ship.
And that's completely fair, and I should have acknowledged it. But, it was half-hearted and it came across in production. But, one of the things that would have been nice is just to give the bad guy a name.To be fair, that's because the producers didn't want to include that element at all; it was pushed on them by the network, which mistrusted the idea of a prequel and wanted the show to have some connection to Trek's future. So since they did it under protest, they were half-hearted about it and tried to use it as little as possible, and they didn't really have a clear idea of what to do with it. So they used it here and there in season 1, mostly avoided it in season 2, revamped it into a whole different story in season 3, and hastened to tie it off for good at the start of season 4 so they could finally put it behind them.
But, one of the things that would have been nice is just to give the bad guy a name.
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