It finally clicked to me last night. It was when I was watching a Voyager episode... I had a bad day I just wanted some comfort blanket nostalgia (wanted to watch the Cloud, started Phage by accident... that ain't comfort blanket...)
But even with its 4:3 frame and what now feels at times claustrophobic framing and reaction shots, I kept feeling this sense of space. Exploration. Movement.
Strange New Worlds I keep using the word insular about its stories. I have no sense of them really going places even though they clearly are going to different places. This is made worse I think by the fact the bridge doesn't feel the hub of SNW like other shows did, they use the medbay and briefing room a lot.
But then it clicked. For me it's more than that... I realised we don't see the Enterprise like a central character in other shows.
I tested this theory by flicking through Through the Lens of Time and Terrarium (other episodes may prove me wrong)... the former I don't think has any Enterprise shots and the latter has one I think.
Terrarium starts in the ship. It ends in the ship.
Compare that to the previous series. They almost always started with an external of the ship, and almost always ended with an external of the ship. They often featured shots of the ship at warp. Often when transferring from a scene on a planet for example to the ship, you'd see an establishing shot of the ship.
I think the nature of broadcast TV also helped this. You'd come back from an ad break to a shot of the ship, and often a captain's log to catch people up. But this acted as a great breather, to stop for a moment and set the scene and move on - something lost on streaming TV.
As a result the ship feels less like a character, but it leads to just one long string of internal scenes. There's no pause, no breath... no sense of the Enterprise being there, moving, traversing space... I forget just how powerful it is seeing an establishing shot of a ship at warp, going somewhere.
It took me ages to click with this, but I think it's something subtle that I miss about old Trek vs new.
But even with its 4:3 frame and what now feels at times claustrophobic framing and reaction shots, I kept feeling this sense of space. Exploration. Movement.
Strange New Worlds I keep using the word insular about its stories. I have no sense of them really going places even though they clearly are going to different places. This is made worse I think by the fact the bridge doesn't feel the hub of SNW like other shows did, they use the medbay and briefing room a lot.
But then it clicked. For me it's more than that... I realised we don't see the Enterprise like a central character in other shows.
I tested this theory by flicking through Through the Lens of Time and Terrarium (other episodes may prove me wrong)... the former I don't think has any Enterprise shots and the latter has one I think.
Terrarium starts in the ship. It ends in the ship.
Compare that to the previous series. They almost always started with an external of the ship, and almost always ended with an external of the ship. They often featured shots of the ship at warp. Often when transferring from a scene on a planet for example to the ship, you'd see an establishing shot of the ship.
I think the nature of broadcast TV also helped this. You'd come back from an ad break to a shot of the ship, and often a captain's log to catch people up. But this acted as a great breather, to stop for a moment and set the scene and move on - something lost on streaming TV.
As a result the ship feels less like a character, but it leads to just one long string of internal scenes. There's no pause, no breath... no sense of the Enterprise being there, moving, traversing space... I forget just how powerful it is seeing an establishing shot of a ship at warp, going somewhere.
It took me ages to click with this, but I think it's something subtle that I miss about old Trek vs new.