I've watched the extended version of The Measure of a Man and still love the episode so much.
I find for the most part the show is really boring and bland; "gentrified". I can imagine the crew preaching about diversity and alien rights during the day and closing the shades on their windows at night while they sip their synthehol brandy listening to light jazz and classical music while reading pre-20th Century literature. I enjoyed the show like everyone else when it first aired but I've found it hard to revisit.
yes. TNG has indeed aged very well over the years. Its a show i personally never get tired of watching. I began watching it when I was about 9 and stayed with it until the end in 1994. I agree the first season is a little bit rocky to begin with andI am 40. I grew up watching TNG. It started when I was in 6th grade and ended when I graduated from HS.. I would watch reruns until my early 30's. Things happened, marraige, family, etc. Now this summer I have started watching it again. With the exception of the first 2 seasons (especially season 1) the show really has aged well in my opinion It does not look corny like TOS did in the 80's, 90's, and today.
Thoughts? Opinions?
hey! don 't forget fellow Paramount show, Cheers. That's held up pretty well too!As far as nostalgia goes, 60s aesthetic has more kitsch value than 80s. And if it's gonna be 80s kitsch then it should be early 80s kitsch. TNG occupies the late 80s and early 90s period which is kind of a cultural no-man's-land. That period is best remembered as the era of Married with Children and the peak of hair-metal, neither of which really show via TNG.
Oh god. Here we go...
I grew up with it, and loved it, but I don't think TNG has aged well at all. The direction is often terrible. The crew stand in a half circle, arms staight at their sides and take turns reciting their lines. It's not the way people talk. There's a lot more, but I imagine this'll cause enough annoyance for one post.
*hides*
As far as nostalgia goes, 60s aesthetic has more kitsch value than 80s. And if it's gonna be 80s kitsch then it should be early 80s kitsch. TNG occupies the late 80s and early 90s period which is kind of a cultural no-man's-land. That period is best remembered as the era of Married with Children and the peak of hair-metal, neither of which really show via TNG.
Pretty much this - TNG had some real gems, and arguably more of them than most of the Trek series. There are some stinkers and some unobjectionable filler episodes, and at 26 episodes a season, I'd be surprised if there weren't. But rewatching 'Darmok', 'Q Who', and 'I, Borg' this week, the show can still have an impact and tell a really good story. I still enjoy it.Some episodes have aged better than others I think. I ended up binging on 60 select episodes over the month of June. 40 or so I pulled from a list that lets you watch through TNG in about 40 hours or so. I dropped a few episodes from that list and added a bunch more I knew I loved watching when they aired. A few I added because if you don't have them you have no idea who some of the characters are later.
Honestly, skipping past some of the more ho-hum episodes and the real stinkers lets you see that yes, when they did it right, TNG is fantastic and really holds up. The remaster into HD actually helps it look less aged by quite a bit. I was skeptical, but watching it on my big screen off Netflix is a joy.
Watched "Encounter at Farpoint" last night. Still entertaining.
Parts of it feel a little dated but the mere fact of knowing that All Good Things picks up the trial from Farpoint again, elevates it in my opinion.
I tend to think the first two seasons have aged better than what came later. There's a very stilted LA Law feel to the later seasons. All in my opinion.
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