There's a lot of criticism of ST shows after VOY claiming they're NOT Star Trek. TNG is like the gold standard when comparing subsequent shows. And yet, I've heard that TNG wasn't well liked for it's first two seasons and that it probably only survived to a third season because of its syndicated status.
Or even before VOY, or aimed at VOY too. Looking back, I get a different impression: DS9 was trying to expand the mold without breaking it and VOY was trying to return to the basics of TNG. It's the same with the newer spinoffs as well, and in a variable in terms of time people might like it one day or they might not. For numerous possible reasons. Or be ambivalent to them or love them or hate them. Art is still an individual experience.
TNG was trying to be a sequel, while some were claiming it was a reboot and trying to detach the 1960s show... the examples I started going into were so complex I could make a full post, despite their tying into another facet of the same theme this thread posits.
I grew up on TNG and it ended up being some cherished television memories. But when I first saw "Encounter at Farpoint" as a small kid I wasn't too impressed. Keep in mind I had only seen a handful of episodes of the original series but it was already "classic" in my mind. Star Trek was supposed to have a dashing, heroic captain, the second in command Spock guy, who was solemn and strange-looking with pointy ears, and Sulu.
Neither was I, but I was also thinking those snazzy book covers to hide our nerdy math and history books... with a picture of an 80s "look at us we're reliving the 60s too!" style show... would somehow make the owners/users of them somehow less nerdy... so glad the show hit the zeitgeist and non-nerds then decided to beat up on only
Doctor Who fans instead...
This new Star Trek had some old bald guy as the captain! What's wrong with them? He's not going to be able to fight one-on-one with Klingons and alien monsters. Forget about any babes falling for him.
Worse, the third episode in he's terrorizing a planet's entire population with photon torpedoes exploding from orbit. Kirk never pulled that type of stunt, and over a situation that didn't need that level of coercion to begin with. (Case in point: "For The Uniform" (DS9) went the extra mile but the reasons for doing so were a lot more significant and reaching to begin with! Makes me wish I saw it on first run...)
This was pretty much the gist of my 7/8 year old impression of the show. Although it looked newer than the original Star Trek I had seen, it had a depressing look to it as well. I don't if it was the lighting or what, but I didn't like it too much.
Overtime the bridge seemed to get brighter, Picard seemed to be more heroic, the uniforms got cooler...everything pretty much just got better.
Yeah, I missed the bright and bold colors.
I missed Sulu. The show was about unity among all races and representation was pretty much the TOS's core bread and butter too.
Fast forward, and I think it's one of the greatest SF shows ever, and it's MY Star Trek. But I've been rewatching the early episodes from Season 1 and 2 and I don't know if it's the knowledge of the rocky start the show had, the online criticisms of the first two seasons, but it FEELS like a show that's going to be cancelled.
A lot of the cast didn't think it'd make a single year. The media was abuzz with "You can't remake Star Trek!" Roddenberry's whims taken to excess are far more prominent in the first half of season one, though we still get glimpses of this in later episodes. Admiral Hansen telling Picard bluntly about "old man's fantasies" about Shelby ranks right up there, but never becomes obtrusive in the way episodes like "Justice" were handled. Even "Measure of a Man" elevated a tawdry escapade into something with some depth and gravitas. That's amazing in of itself.
But little sci-fi existed at the same time, certainly with the cinematic-worthy special effects that propped it up.
But decades later and looking back, I see more in the episodes - uneven as they were - that had serious potential, or were even moderately successful. Heck, even as newer TNG came out and the older ones were re-ran, the older ones had more of a life to them whereas seasons 5-7 felt stale (and overtly preachy, which isn't always great even when you agree with it.)
I like the characters and premise. And despite great production design everything feels kind of cheap. It almost looks cheesy. And the pace is incredibly slow. I don't mind it too much as I have plenty of time to watch it and take in the atmosphere and scenery of the show, but it's a little unsettling. It very much has the feel of those various syndicated sitcoms that never made it past a first or second season.
For me, the pacing hasn't aged at all. It has a nice fluid flow allowing plot and character buildup. A lot of today's shows almost create ADHD by how fast they spit out scenes and umpteen side plots to distract. Ditto for 60s Trek - which is often more just a main plot than side plots. So in a way there can be a slowness - unless the main plot is so gripping and several are...
Riker is a pretty likable character character as the show progresses. Early episodes just feel weird to watch him. Maybe it's a case of all the actors getting more comfortable with their character and the dialogue getting better
I gravitated around Data and Geordi. I could relate to them the most with their techie personalities. I adored Guinan because I like mysterious, cryptic characters. (All of which was more or less ruined in GEN but that's a movie setting the stage for the films ahead of it... but who wanted to know where Guinan came from? Then they answer it, which led to only more and bigger problems - just how far into the Alpha Quadrant were the Borg to be picked up nearby by the only Federation ship in town? For one example of many...)
I did like Riker's brashness, especially with Ro... he could be a bit much toward Data, though.
There's definitely gems. Datalore is still great, and gave us one of the best Star Trek villains.
It's rough around the edges, but Spiner, McFadden, Stewart, and Wheaton steal the show. As had Spiner, but he's so good he needs to be said twice. Partly because he's doing a dual role. The direction really sells Lore as well. The ending where they decide to let DATA use a contraction was said to be deliberate, instead of playing it straight. (Ugh, season one for all its high points still sometimes opted to not tie the shoelaces before running that sprint and trips...)
I have yet to see the racist episode but I'm sure it'll only add to the feeling that this is NOT Star Trek and a poor successor to Kirk's crew.
Yeah, that's the one where Picard throws a tantrum and dishonorably lobs torpedoes into Ligon II's orbit and detonates them.
I'd still watch it, knowing how much better the show and characters are in all the other episodes. True, it's as racist as "Justice" (the planet of the blond hair-blue eyes) is but some plot points are fascinating. And a plus, Jessie Lawrence Ferguson pretty much carries the episode's watchability as Lutan, regardless of how generic when not unpalatable the script it.
I can only imagine the disconnect between watching the excellent Shatner movies and than seeing this.
With that said...looking at it purely as a science fiction show, it's incredibly interesting.
since STIV was the last Trek movie shown at the time and it was a ha-ha-bonk fest, with STV and to a lesser extent STVI also sending up Kirk and the gang in the preocess, TNG being
serious in tone had some people wishing the Kirk movies kept the same level of seriousness. It was serendipity but that might be another reason TNG survived. If it took the same comedy routines, on top of everything else, it may not have survived. Especially as comedic side of Q has always been contentious among fans. Oddly enough, I adore Q too.
"Time Squared" feels cheesy, pacing is very slow, and everything just looks and feels depressing. But it's just an intriguing story and I love the mystery of it.







Sorry, just being silly. The mystery is great but seeing Picard question himself, as well as giving Troi something of some value to do, worked for me. It does have some cheesiness to it and I'll agree a couple scenes could be tightened up and padding reduced. But I feel it carries itself enough and with some neat sci-fi ideas. Season 2 has the show spreading its wings more, combined with characters that are finally feeling in-place.