"Grimdark"?I've never seen one canon example of Star Trek being "grimdark."
Mirror Universe? Or is that too campy to be grimdark?
"Grimdark"?I've never seen one canon example of Star Trek being "grimdark."
"Grimdark"?I've never seen one canon example of Star Trek being "grimdark."
Mirror Universe? Or is that too campy to be grimdark?
"Grimdark"?I've never seen one canon example of Star Trek being "grimdark."
Also, try answering the question: if you had to live on one of these starships, in the real world, for twenty years, which would it be? It would be difficult anywhere, but I think the comfortable open spaces and holodecks of the Galaxy Class stand it apart. Also, I imagine shore leave/etc make it bearable. But people left there homes for long stretches all the time historically, and I see it as much more doable In the 24th century, especially with lifespans stretching to near 150 years.
"The Best of Both Worlds", "The Drumhead", "The Wounded" from TNG alone. There's "The Siege of AR-558" from DS9, "Year of Hell" from Voyager, "The Enemy Within" and "The Day of the Dove" from TOS.
Star Trek can do dark themes with the best of them.
Yep, that unfortunately describes Discovery pretty accurately (minus explicit sex content, which it could have had more of instead of Boringham monologues)That's not what grimdark means. It comes from Warhammer 40,000, and was originally mocking settings that add tons of brutality, pessimism, explicit sex content, and ultraviolence in order to convince the teenagers who are most attracted to it that it's "mature" - not "kid's stuff." One important trait is it takes itself totally seriously - it's not attempting to be campy like the MU Trek episodes.
I must watch different shows.Yep, that unfortunately describes Discovery pretty accurately (minus explicit sex content, which it could have had more of instead of Boringham monologues)
"Grimdark"?I've never seen one canon example of Star Trek being "grimdark."
"The Best of Both Worlds", "The Drumhead", "The Wounded" from TNG alone. There's "The Siege of AR-558" from DS9, "Year of Hell" from Voyager, "The Enemy Within" and "The Day of the Dove" from TOS.
Star Trek can do dark themes with the best of them.
Nope.what is disaster.
Discovery is much more "mama's boy plays heretic". Look at the way they handled the word "fuck".
Hmm...I must not be an American...Americans don’t like naughty words, female nipples or bush. Hence the violence instead.
Hmm...I must not be an American...![]()
No one asked my opinion on the matter.Ok...let’s just say...the overall powers that be aren’t fond of it. The people are very fond of it, but aren’t allowed it in most entertainment, but shooting in the face with guns is very wholesome apparently. Have the overall powers that be got over Janet Jackson’s nipple yet, or are they still receiving counselling?![]()
And now we don't have LCARS, what is disaster.
There was nothing sexy about tng costumesSomehow, I don't think 'Sexy' is ever going to go out of style.
(at least not while Humans are still using 'physical sex' for reproduction)
DSC. Nomming people, severed heads galore, rape, graphic surgery, war crimes.....
Axanar is about a guy saving the Federation single handedly from klingons during a war and no one bats an eye, put a woman in the same situation and suddenly she's a Mary sue and star trek shouldn't be about war. Oh trekkies *laughs and shakes head*That's all well and good but there is real world considerations that balance my fan desires. So, yes, safe and familiar is what sells and Hollywood is more risk adverse. I don't need a marketing degree to observe trends.
Fans speak a good game but haven't demonstrated a willingness to purchase it. So, that's the rub.
I mean, fan films went down the darker more grittier path long before DSC got accused of being "grimdark." Fan films explored ideas of war, and trauma and loss. So, if anything, CBS went the path that fans supposedly wanted. And yet, there is this neverending litany of complaints of them missing the point of Star Trek...![]()
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