Oh yes, it's a lot easier to produce 10 good episodes per year than 20 or more.
I’m talking about the reverse. I think the percentage of good episodes is higher than the current shows.
Oh yes, it's a lot easier to produce 10 good episodes per year than 20 or more.
I feel like Trek has always been absurd, especially since TOS and TAS. Not sure when Trek became "serious business" but I feel that ignores a lot of early Trek in favor of hyper realism.
Sure, but it wasn't always in practice.Except the 1960s original was sold to audiences as serious-toned, adult sci-fi.
There is a difference between "serious business", which is a fan construct and a serious show, which is what the folks who made the show intended. But just how serious the show was shifted from episode to episode, depending on the plot. It had intentional "comedy bit' music stings, like with Kirk and the Tribble-lanch. It was never afraid of comedy.Except the 1960s original was sold to audiences as serious-toned, adult sci-fi.
Trek always was absurd, on some level. Most fiction invariably is. But it's more than just that and had to be. Even if the stories were "The Twilight Zone... In Space" and even some plot elements rehashed in season one, but they took themselves seriously and that's the difference. Absurdism can be plot content, presentation, acting, a combination of all three, but when the show took the absurd as seriously as if it was no less out-of-the-ordinary than any average soap opera, big screen epic, or real-life daily event for that matter, it seemed to be a lot more satisfying than a show that won't play it straight but expects the audience to swallow it. Everyone's line between what works for them and what doesn't is obviously going to be different. Imagine Trelane, after his mommy and daddy call him in in what's clearly one of the most least-effective scenes of the season, now turning the the camera and telling the audience he'll be right back after din-din and a nap. Trek wouldn't treat its audience like that, unless the audience was a gaggle of 5 year-olds. Gotta wonder the mindset of the writer who wrote "The Squire of Gothos" and why he opted to write Trelane's closure like that, reduced to what amounts to a nuclear family kid like a Dennis the Menace trope. Especially given how taut his "Balance of Terror", which is about as adult as 60s televised sci-fi could possibly get in tone.But even prior to Trelane's "come inside now" scene. character interaction still sold the whole affair as serious business. Not post-postmodern self-aware stuff that's far easier to sell.
I’m kind of in two minds as per the arguments presented in this thread.
One the one hand, I am happy that there is still some interest amongst those who can in producing Star Trek. I’m happy it was made.
But then on the other hand, all streaming Trek has been a series of intense ups and downs for me. There are shows I like. Shows I don’t care for at all. Even shows I don’t care about in the first place.
I mean, sure, okay. Star Trek sitcom. I’ll watch it and most likely it’ll be funny or whatever, but when I want Star Trek, I’m wanting a very specific thing. 45 minutes of cool space adventure.
There’s other shows I go to for comedy.
But then, I like LDS so… eh, I’m open to Star Trek sitcom.
I dunno. I wish I loved the new stuff with the same intensity as I do the old, but I don’t. I know that Trek from TOS-ENT is inconsistent a lot of the time, but it gets it right more often it doesn’t in terms of presenting, for want of a better term, a ‘world’. I just don’t get that from a lot of the new stuff.
Oh yes, it's a lot easier to produce 10 good episodes per year than 20 or more.
There is a difference between "serious business", which is a fan construct and a serious show, which is what the folks who made the show intended. But just how serious the show was shifted from episode to episode, depending on the plot. It had intentional "comedy bit' music stings, like with Kirk and the Tribble-lanch. It was never afraid of comedy.
I love "A Piece of the Action". It's comedy landed for me. It's a classic Trek episode. Never met anyone who disliked it. It's like the second "Earth-type"* planet episode, IIRC. And the first to invoke a specific time period. But that concept was baked into Star Trek at the pitch. I'm surprised they didn't do it more often. God knows props and wardrobe had the goods.True.
But the comedy didn't always work - for every "Tribble" there's a "Piece of the Action", for which relied on different comedic tropes. "Tribbles" was more akin to situational comedy. "Piece" was satirical/parody, risible, and perhaps even 4th wall in its approach. Depending on fan, they'll like either, both, or neither. TOS should get credit for not being afraid of comedy, which is also much harder than drama because it's so subjective.
Not to mention "Tomorrow is Yesterday", which cleverly throws in some gags (fish out of water) and doing it very cleverly in amongst the more serious elements. IMHO, that one works the best but YMMV.
Or, if not tangentially, the inverse of "Piece of the Action", known as "Spock's Brain", which was written as a dare because someone thought the show was taking itself too seriously so they scribbled out that joke of an episode. And yet, dumb or anything else, it's somehow yet far easier to sit through "Brain and brain, what is brain!" than "Fizzbin with the heaters on yet another planet that's just like Earth", for which the Earth-type recurrence was an increasingly bad running gag of its own right.
Yes they did.
I've said this before: If I want a closed-ended, arc-dominated series, I'll watch B5, which I regard not as a conventional series, but as a 5-year-long miniseries. JMS does that sort of thing extremely well (and it, too, did "non-arc" stories, especially in the first two seasons). In fact, one of these days, I'll probably plunk down the money for a B5 complete series DVD set, just so I can see the S1 episodes I missed. I wonder what a used copy is going for on Alibris . . . .
I didn't like DISCO either but then came Picard, Lower Decks and SNW and they've been better.
Yup.But really, all of these shows could have crashed and burned horribly and I would STILL be happy when there is a new show.
Yup.
Life's too short to be negative on an entertainment franchise.
Life's too short not to care deeply about the things you care about.
I don't let terrible thinks impact my future excitement. Star Trek is hit and miss for me. Always has been, always will be. That I didn't like something doesn't curtail future excitement.Rather, I view it as life is too short to not be negative about bad things, because otherwise they will just keep making bad things. I only have finite time to enjoy the things I enjoy, making terrible things is a waste of that time that I can never get back that COULD have been spent enjoying the things I like.
I love how being angry implies you care more than people who accept that some things are just not for them.Life's too short not to care deeply about the things you care about.
I'm not very excited about the Section 31 movie either.They've been better, sure. Picard especially.
It's hard to REALLY get excited when Paramount seems to want keep doubling down on the bad parts. Even SNW, while generally good, has been in a decline of quality.
There's still good to be had, and i'm hoping things are turning in the right direction. It's hard to stay excited when you're waiting for the next good thing and they pump out something like the Section 31 trailer, which looks absolutely, atrociously terrible. It may be the first piece of Star Trek media available to me that i'm not going to bother to consume.
I'm not very excited about the Section 31 movie either.
But the Starfleet Academy series could be good...or at least interesting.
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