It doesn't sound fun.I cannot understand the resistance to a musical episode, and I say that as someone who came late to appreciating musicals.
That is all.
It doesn't sound fun.I cannot understand the resistance to a musical episode, and I say that as someone who came late to appreciating musicals.
I forgot about Xena and I loved it.This is where, as always, I'm compelled to point out that XENA did the musical-ep thing before BUFFY -- and, yes, "The Bitter Suite" was also a heart-wrencher.
(No disrespect to BUFFY intended; it's just that whenever the the subject of musical eps come up, folks always seem to cite BUFFY as the touchstone, while forgetting about XENA.)
Nope.but there's a difference between a silly episode in a 20+ episode season, and a 10 episode season. .
This is not remotely accurate.Lower Decks was always supposed to be Trek's Beavis and Butthead or South Park.
There's really not. A silly episode is silly. Doesn't matter if it's 5, 10 or 20 episodes in a season. If it's silly, it stands out. Trouble with Tribbles stands out. Take me out to the holosuite stands way out.Nope.
I find that hard to believe since I cannot stand either South Park or Beavis and Butthead, while Lower Decks approaches the Star Trek world with a loving irreverence. It's willing to have fun with the premise while acknowledging these are the things fans love about it.Lower Decks was always supposed to be Trek's Beavis and Butthead or South Park or raunchy "adult" shows along that line
I get the sentiment. It's matter of taste - but for me it works. The "darker" episodes feel so much more serious, purely because it is a change to the more light-hearted "normal" tone.But that's the common misconception about TOS. Well I'll take it if it's "winked at the audience in spots", but many people, when they're getting defensive about SNW, like to point out how TOS "was comedic all the time", which is really not true. That was a drama show first and foremost, which had a three or so outright comedies out of 79 episodes (I Mudd, Tribbles, Piece of the Action) and Gene Coon's tenure as showrunner of about a season's worth of episodes, in which episodes tended to have a humorous coda with everyone laughing it up on the bridge, but many of those came (often incongruously) at the end of otherwise pretty serious business (Galileo Seven, The Changeling immediately come to mind). Comedy left the show pretty much completely once Fred Freiberger took over.
And that was out of 79 episodes. SNW has had 16 so far, at least three of which were 100% comedies, and most of the rest had some heavy lightness going on (sounds like an oxymoron, but it feels heavy because it limits the show, IMO). Does anyone think that Pike's pirate laugh in "The Serene Squall" was a particularly good moment of comedy? I don't think so. But did it make the character look silly? Hell yes. Just one example. The addition of Pelia as strictly a comic relief character only adds to the impression that somebody among TPTB may see this show as a comedy first, drama second.
Interestingly, although tastes differ, and some people here clearly enjoy the lightheartedness, some of the best-rated episodes from fan conversations or also imdb ratings seem to be the ones that were dead serious, like "A Quality of Mercy" and "Ad Astra Per Aspera".
Nope.The only thing LD has in common with those shows is that they're animated. Their tone, brand of humor, and intended audience are all completely different.
By your own admission, you haven't watched enough Lower Decks to know the character of Boimler, so you're making assumptions about him based on your personal experience. But your experience is not reflected in Boimler's character arc. Which you would know if you watched the series.Boimler is the punch guy of the jokes, everyone looks down on him, and Pike condescendingly told him he's going to the brig and then a starbase to "be someone else's problem". Maybe people like beating up on the outcast or the one out of place and find that funny, and going by the tone of these boards I can already tell those types of people. I don't find it funny.
And ignores that LD actually did some character growth rather than keeping people static in the name of humor.By your own admission, you haven't watched enough Lower Decks to know the character of Boimler, so you're making assumptions about him based on your personal experience. But your experience is not reflected in Boimler's character arc. Which you would know if you watched the series.
Not really.Yes. It's too silly.
It's like the pop culture referential version of Trek.
Nothing wrong will a silly episode, but there's a difference between a silly episode in a 20+ episode season, and a 10 episode season. Also, some of the sillier episode of Trek are more campy in hindsight than they were in the context of their own time.
WHUT?Its why James Gunns style of humor (already toned down from unfortunate tweets that got him in trouble with Disney) is so popular, as are his Guardians movies. Characters like Gamora and Nebula are all about knocking other characters down and people find it funny and it sells. I understand Trek trying to get that audience and money, but at the end of the day I personally dont care for it
Yes? No?Is this back to the idea of Star Trek is to be primarily serious business, and humor is only a deviation from the norm?
I swear somewhere along the lines LD humor became synonymous with insult humor? 'Cause I watch British TV for that.WHUT?
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