In a visual medium? Nope.You put too much stock into visuals.
In a visual medium? Nope.You put too much stock into visuals.
In a visual medium? Nope.
In a visual medium? Nope.
Here's where I stand. It's obvious that in the year 2017 we weren't getting a faithful recreation fo TOS-era sets and technology. To an extent the fans who say that audiences demand more these days are indeed correct. A backlit display screen with blinking squares that does nothing else isn't going to be enough for a modern audience, even the hardcore old school Trekkies. That said:
You can create an effective hybrid design aesthetic that uses TOS designs for computers and displays and simply upgrades them with interchangeable screens, touch-sensitive icons and the occasional transparent flatscreen displays like we see in both the Kelvin Timeline and DSC. But throw in the blinky buttons and blinking indicator lights with the colors we're used to. Make a few of the corridors on the ships TOS-like in shape and even lighting. There is a comfortable middle ground that could satisfy most fans both young and old if they just tried.
When you create a design aesthetic that is almost completely different from what we already know exists in this decade of Starfleet history but won't even acknowledge the others with visual nods or bones thrown at the fanbase then it does rankle millions of Trekkies to whom visual continuity may not be a begin-all, end-all topic of debate but still remains important. Sure, a rectangular box with blinking buttons that you have to peer down inside of to see a readout of some kind? Yeah, that can be retconned or replaced. But pretending that TOS from a visual design standpoint doesn't exist because of Bryan Fuller or a 25% difference mandate or "the modern kids won't believe it" doesn't help your series expand out and both gain new viewers and keep the core fanbase from deserting the show out of disappointment.
Trek can be both old school and fresh and new if you're creative enough to pull it off and respectful of the fanbase. TNG, DS9, VOY and ENT all managed to pull it off.
Though I admit I sometimes wonder, what if they went the "In a Mirror Darkly" route? I wonder, had they recreated the sets, but updated the special effects to include those in the previous backlit displays (but kept the sets the same) would that have truly doomed the show? I wonder
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