Granted we only saw Jeff Hunter’s Pike in one episode, but what I saw of him was nothing like how Anson Mount portrays him. It’s like they are two completely different people.
I don't know. I've seen people in the depths of depression who seem like completely different folks than when they're out of it. I can buy that Anson Mount and Jeffrey Hunter are the same guy.
Really, none of the TOS-centric SNW characters act like their TOS counterparts.
Disagree -- for me it's a mixed bag in terms of "do these people feel like the TOS version." I think Celia Rose Gooding absolutely nails it as Uhura. I have no trouble believing that Babs Olusanmokun and Rebecca Romijn are M'Benga and Number One -- especially since the TOS versions of those characters were complete ciphers. But both Olusanmokun and Romijn bring a sense of command dignity to those characters that I think Booker Bradshaw and Majel Barrett brought on TOS.
I think we can all agree that Jess Bush's Christine Chapel is a very different version of that character than we saw in TOS. I for one absolutely do not give a shit, because the TOS version of Chapel is awful.
I have never really felt like Ethan Peck's Spock feels like the same character as Leonard Nimoy's Spock, but I've always enjoyed his version of the character so I suspend my disbelief.
Paul Wesley doesn't really have the sort of commanding presence and charisma that William Shatner has, but there again no one is Shatner but Shatner, so I let it go.
I don't have a strong enough sense of Martin Quinn's Scotty to know if they feel like the same character -- except to say that Quinn is just way, way too young. Scotty should be in his late 30s or early 40s by 2260 (James Doohan turned 40 in 1960; Quinn turns 30 this year). But, sometimes actors can transcend things like that, so I'll keep an open mind yet.
You can say ‘people change’ til the cows come home, but these are fictional people completely at the whim of the writers. If the writers wanted to write those character like they appeared in TOS, they could have done so.
I mean, yes and no? Sorry, but 1) these characters are all at a very different time in their lives, and 2) writing styles that were acceptable in 1966 are just not acceptable anymore. There is a level of depth demanded by modern television that TOS could never have matched because the conventions of television writing in the 1960s did not allow it.
And while I applaud them taking these characters in new directions, the idea (as Serveaux mentioned) that they will eventually ‘become’ the TOS crew, is pretty silly. I mean, who is rooting for SNW T’Pring to turn into a conniving bitch who wants Spock dead so she can shack up with Dull Guy?
I do agree that Gia Sandhu's T'Pring feels more compassionate than Arlene Martel's. But I don't really have a problem with the idea that T'Pring might become more cold-hearted as a result of anger at Spock's rejection.