Yes, I really liked that too, but that's not the show we're actually getting.
My headcanon is red is Barclay's great grandmother and I hope to God she gets a bigger role.
Yes, I really liked that too, but that's not the show we're actually getting.
This is a great point. I agree with it. But, if you think about it, it's entirely different than every other protagonist in the other ST series.
That explains why Game of Throne is so unpopular. Oh wait.I don't think it matters that much whether it violates any pre-determined vision or preconceptions. I have to say though, with the exception of Saru and Lorca, I found the characters pretty unlikable and uninteresting people as far as the setup goes. Yeah, I know it's only three episodes in and they will develop – and I do like it as a show and am intrigued to see more of the world the story is set in – but I can't pretend I've found most of the characters anything other than cold, angry, empathy-lacking and crotchety.
As viewers we picture ourselves in the place we are seeing and imagine how we'd feel. For me, that's 'frustrated and wanting to leave'.
No, it isn't bad and no I don't want it to mimic other Trek shows!And this is a bad thing? We want DSC to simply mimic the previous six TREK shows? As someone else noted earlier, this is not supposed to be the eighth season of TNG . . . .
Eighth? With Voyager and Enterprise this would be the 22nd!And this is a bad thing? We want DSC to simply mimic the previous six TREK shows? As someone else noted earlier, this is not supposed to be the eighth season of TNG . . . .
They aren't even close to the "nasty" of the Mirror Universe.dark, depressing, everyone is nasty
See, I read that scene completely differently. I didn't think that was just about showing off the special effects. I thought that scene showed us things about Burnham that were completely in character with what we've seen before, in a couple of ways:
1) She does believe in Starfleet's ideals, so if she thinks Lorca is up to something shady, she's damn well going to look into it as a matter of conscience and duty. It wasn't just a matter of curiosity.
2) She is, as Saru noted, "dangerous." She's smart and capable and resourceful, but she's not always a team player and.she's going to do what she thinks she has to do, regardless, even if that means doing the wrong things for right reasons. (Not unlike her foster brother, actually.)
That's who Burnham is. She's complex, contradictory, and not always predictable--just like real people.
Or, to put it another way, people saying one thing and doing another is not necessarily an inconsistency or sloppy characterization. It just means that dialogue should not always be taken at face value . . . and that human beings are masses of paradoxes and contradictions.
By 1960's standards it did. The dialog and performances on TOS were not that different than what you'd find on The Naked City or BonanzaThat may have been what he wanted originally, but that isn't what ended up on-screen.
I still say that, and those are the reasons I don't really like it.
I disagree, she did not offer to be his love instructor....(sorry, could not resist that one...I think that she sounded at least a little "Roddenberry-esque" when she confronted Lorca at the end of the last episode. Just a little, though.
I'll freely admit something: I don't watch much TV at all.
I'm 38 and I haven't owned a TV since I was 21. Since streaming has become a thing, I've been nostalgically rewatching TV from my childhood (including Trek). I've also been watching Game of Thrones and The Expanse because I was a fan of the novels. But I've never seen a single episode Lost, The Wire, The Walking Dead, Mad Men, Breaking Bad, Girls, Orange Is The New Black, etc. I'm just not that interested in TV compared to books or gaming, and when I watch TV, it's basically just science fiction/fantasy. So you may well be right it compares well with modern TV, but it's just not something I'm particularly interested in.
That explains why Game of Throne is so unpopular. Oh wait.
All I see in Discovery is a group of flawed people who are going to go through a lot of shit eventually growing into the 'Gene-vision' version of themselves. We are watching people earn a utopia that for so long was handed to us matter-of-factly. This is the version of Star Trek for the modern era where things are shitty and we have to be stronger together to get past it to something better. Star Trek is about hope for the future to me, and that's what I see right now in Discovery. Michael is on her hero's journey, and according to the hero template, she has to lose her mentor and faith in the cause before earning her victory.
Fair enough. But one can argue that those new shows are DSC's "competition" these days, not older science fiction shows from earlier eras of television. STAR TREK does not exist in a bubble outside the rest of pop culture; it's needs to feel like a modern show made for modern viewers, not a nostalgia piece.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.