Sooo..... Shuttlepod One...
Really good episode, nice story with Trip and Malcolm (even if it's a bit morbid), but man, poor T'Pol. Seems like Berman & Braga have some kind of fetish for emotionless alien girls in tight-fitting catsuits.
I can think of ways of improving "Shuttlepod One" mostly removing everthing set on Enterprise.
Wouldn't that mean the episode ends with Trip and Malcolm dying? (Or was that the joke?)
That's not something new to Trek in Enterprise.
The worst offenders are still TOS and first season TNG where many aliens didn't even get any kind of prosthetic make-up at all, just a fancy costume.
Don't forget about the Preservers. TOS explained all the humanoid aliens right there in The Paradise Syndrome. The Chase was superfluous and a little contradictory..
Also, to be fair, there's no reason to think from TOS that the Preservers were some huge significant empire or group in the far distant past except for some reason that idea got picked up as widespread fanon. The only evidence we have of the Preservers is that they picked up cultures at risk of extinction some time in the 17th-19th centuries and put them on other planets (seeing as how the cultures in question weren't really in danger of extinction at a point before then), and they had technology that could redirect an asteroid. That's not really all that extraordinary or ancient. I can't imagine that if an asteroid was heading towards Earth, Vulcan, Andor, or wherever, that there wouldn't some sort of stations or land-based facilities or something that would be able to redirect it.
That's true. But I guess it's just more noticeable now since those shows had lots of other new species like the Vulcans, Andorians, Tellarites, Klingons, Romulans, Ferengi, Cardassians, etc.. ENT has the Suliban and... that's it.
Wait, you're calling out Enterprise for just giving humans with small prosthetics and calling them aliens, and simultaneously giving TOS credit for Vulcans, Klingons, and Romulans as good designs?
Plus, Enterprise also has Denobulans from right out the gate too, don't forget.
The TOS production people were ahead of their time for realizing that they got better results and better believability with smaller subtler effects. Such as ears, or the minor makeup touches for Klingons.
You and @Shalashaska are talking about two different kinds of believability, I think. You're talking about dramatic believability, or narrative believability, the sort of believability that keeps someone from being pulled out of a story by making you go "haha what that looks so stupid". But it sounds like he's talking about scientific believability, questioning the underlying logic beneath having such aliens in the first place. You're talking from an external perspective, and he's talking from an internal. Two different concepts that get confusingly given the same name, leading to miscommunication.
A SF show isn't trying, unless they look for unexplored ways to bring unhumanish aliens into stories. We don't need to have very human-seeming actors projecting very identifiable human emotions and motivations onto every single alien character... actually that's the thing to work against. It's difficult, but if you don't, you end up in Funny Forehead Galaxy, you forget your mission to do real SF, and your show gets a reputation for not trying to do SF at all. People end up assuming it was just meant to be a space opera from the beginning.
A SF show isn't trying, unless they look for unexplored ways to bring unhumanish aliens into stories. We don't need to have very human-seeming actors projecting very identifiable human emotions and motivations onto every single alien character... actually that's the thing to work against. It's difficult, but if you don't, you end up in Funny Forehead Galaxy, you forget your mission to do real SF, and your show gets a reputation for not trying to do SF at all. People end up assuming it was just meant to be a space opera from the beginning.
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