So I recently rewatched Disco, mostly because my sister-in-law started watching it and my wife and I came along for the ride. In watching, I was reminded of what I loved about it, what drove me nuts, and why I stopped watching it altogether.
Season 1: Hell, I love this season. The story is great, it has dynamic twists and turns, and the main cast are dynamic and intriguing. Lorca became one of my favorite captains very quickly. I hated the pointless redesign of the Klingons, and I thought their ships were eyesores, but other than that I loved it.
Season 2: I loved parts of it, hated others. The use of Section 31 played like someone who'd been told about it, but never watched DS9. They forgot it was supposed to be a clandestine division of Starfleet Intelligence, not the whole thing, and they certainly weren't supposed to have their own cool ships and nifty badges. But, the performances were once again strong, the story intriguing (if a little convoluted) and it also launched the wonderful Strange New Worlds.
Season 3: Andromeda by way of Star Trek. It was...okay. For the first time, I found myself actually forgetting to watch it some weeks. I enjoyed Saru as captain, but I hated the way they made him look like a buffoon to pave the way for Burnham. Stamets had been one of my favorites, but I found his obsessive "adoption" of Gray and Tal to be creepy. When he started referring to them as his kids by season's end, it seemed to me more like someone being inappropriate than anything else. It might have helped if we knew, maybe, where Adira's parents were or even what happened to them, but they are never once even mentioned. And the resolution, with the dilithium being blown up because Su'kal was crying, was especially aggravating. I mean, the whole idea of the Burn was a bit silly, but that was a rancid cherry on top.
Season 4: And here is where they lost me. Another threat to the WHOLE GALAXY that only Discovery can solve. Remember when we chuckled about the Enterprise always being the only ship in range of Earth in the movies? This is that times 1,000. But really, what finally did me in was the Zora issue. We have Stamets positing the only rational reaction to Zora's emergence, only for him to get slapped down by, basically, everybody and told that if he doesn't get on board with Zora he's fired. Which is ridiculous. Never mind that Zora infiltrated the ship without permission. Never mind that Zora already put the WHOLE GALAXY at risk via impeding Starfleet's conflict with Control. Never mind that Zora is now putting MILLIONS MORE at risk because she doesn't want to allow Starfleet to take their ship to meet the 10-C. Never mind that, as Kovich pointed out to Burnham, Discovery is STARFLEET'S ship. No, let's just let the brand-new sentient AI have complete control over the ship with no real safeguards. And Stamets, you're a jerk for not trusting her.
Ugh.
Kirk would have talked Zora into killing herself. Picard would have tricked Zora onto a holodeck. Sisko would have isolated Zora in a dog house. Janeway would reset Zora like a faulty iPhone. But no, on Discovery, we just let the rogue AI have full control of the ship, and no one seems to mind.
And I couldn't watch after that. I was too angry. So I finished it with my sister-in-law, and it was...okay? I ignored the Zora thing as best I could, but overall the story dragged. It wasn't a BAD story, it just ran for about 4 episodes too long, at a minimum.
So for Season 5...it features Romulans, I hope? Or maybe that's just an instigating event. We will see. I'll watch it, but to quote one of my favorite Romulans, "My expectations are so low, you'd have to work very hard to disappoint me indeed."
Season 1: Hell, I love this season. The story is great, it has dynamic twists and turns, and the main cast are dynamic and intriguing. Lorca became one of my favorite captains very quickly. I hated the pointless redesign of the Klingons, and I thought their ships were eyesores, but other than that I loved it.
Season 2: I loved parts of it, hated others. The use of Section 31 played like someone who'd been told about it, but never watched DS9. They forgot it was supposed to be a clandestine division of Starfleet Intelligence, not the whole thing, and they certainly weren't supposed to have their own cool ships and nifty badges. But, the performances were once again strong, the story intriguing (if a little convoluted) and it also launched the wonderful Strange New Worlds.
Season 3: Andromeda by way of Star Trek. It was...okay. For the first time, I found myself actually forgetting to watch it some weeks. I enjoyed Saru as captain, but I hated the way they made him look like a buffoon to pave the way for Burnham. Stamets had been one of my favorites, but I found his obsessive "adoption" of Gray and Tal to be creepy. When he started referring to them as his kids by season's end, it seemed to me more like someone being inappropriate than anything else. It might have helped if we knew, maybe, where Adira's parents were or even what happened to them, but they are never once even mentioned. And the resolution, with the dilithium being blown up because Su'kal was crying, was especially aggravating. I mean, the whole idea of the Burn was a bit silly, but that was a rancid cherry on top.
Season 4: And here is where they lost me. Another threat to the WHOLE GALAXY that only Discovery can solve. Remember when we chuckled about the Enterprise always being the only ship in range of Earth in the movies? This is that times 1,000. But really, what finally did me in was the Zora issue. We have Stamets positing the only rational reaction to Zora's emergence, only for him to get slapped down by, basically, everybody and told that if he doesn't get on board with Zora he's fired. Which is ridiculous. Never mind that Zora infiltrated the ship without permission. Never mind that Zora already put the WHOLE GALAXY at risk via impeding Starfleet's conflict with Control. Never mind that Zora is now putting MILLIONS MORE at risk because she doesn't want to allow Starfleet to take their ship to meet the 10-C. Never mind that, as Kovich pointed out to Burnham, Discovery is STARFLEET'S ship. No, let's just let the brand-new sentient AI have complete control over the ship with no real safeguards. And Stamets, you're a jerk for not trusting her.
Ugh.
Kirk would have talked Zora into killing herself. Picard would have tricked Zora onto a holodeck. Sisko would have isolated Zora in a dog house. Janeway would reset Zora like a faulty iPhone. But no, on Discovery, we just let the rogue AI have full control of the ship, and no one seems to mind.
And I couldn't watch after that. I was too angry. So I finished it with my sister-in-law, and it was...okay? I ignored the Zora thing as best I could, but overall the story dragged. It wasn't a BAD story, it just ran for about 4 episodes too long, at a minimum.
So for Season 5...it features Romulans, I hope? Or maybe that's just an instigating event. We will see. I'll watch it, but to quote one of my favorite Romulans, "My expectations are so low, you'd have to work very hard to disappoint me indeed."