I'm not knocking the show storytelling wise, but TNG is responsible for creating this 'too deep' image, a kind of sci-fi starchiness, because Roddenberry wanted people who aren't flawed - which isn't attractive to us f'd up mere mortals. We want characters to strive, to improve, to show us we *can* do better - if they're already there, that's just a whole lot less interesting.
Eliminating internal conflict makes for poor, or rather, nonexistent drama. Resulting in bland characters and a dull story.
I was actually relieved when DS9 featured 1. flawed characters who 2. were often in conflict with each other. It was almost as if honesty had replaced a facade of perfection. (In real life Communism once had a similar facade). Like a breath of fresh air.
One of my favorite dialogs was in a Trek episode where Odo and Quark are stranded on a planet, and they finally admit to their hatred of each other. Odo was a shape shifter, and Quark was a troll, but they seemed more human than the human characters of TNG.
Trek must have been a stultifying experience for writers and actors, until Roddenberry was off the scene.
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Exactly the same kind of targswallop we heard so much of before the release of Prelude. They could add Denzel fracking Washington to the cast and we'd be hearing this stuff.
