What do they add?What do such elements take away from the story?
What do they add?What do such elements take away from the story?
You think F bombs and dismembered bodies with their internal organs hanging out are "pretty tame" for a franchise that has, or had, a family audience?
This. We have a Star Trek show that is dealing with male victims of sexual assault and PTSD in a sensitive grownup, and stark manner. This is worth some NSFW visuals.I'm just glad to have a show which deals with a topic like rape in a mature, adult fashion, rather than the juvenile way that TNG and Enterprise in particular did
Fingers crossed for Januaryalso it's not truly R rated until we have seen flaccid Klingon dick, full frontal.
Since you brought it up, what a child should watch. I think the scene with Tyler remembering being tortured and the sexual twisted aspect of his memories is not something I think a child needs to see. I don't care about other depictions. Discovery is not previous Star Trek. It is not rated that way, nor is it depicted that way, so hiding behind the sensibilities of the past is mostly irrelevant. If a past scene was rated (as apparently one is) as Restricted, so be it.For a franchise which has often dealt with mature themes, and has often had mature content, I think it is quite unremarkable.
I find it strange that people focus so much on visuals - would the previous episode have been perfectly fine for a child viewer without a few seconds of an apparent rape (and, attracting the most attention, a glimpse of breasts which I didn't even notice on a first viewing), with Tyler "merely" talking about being raped for months?
If it is okay for a child to watch Kirk attempting to rape Rand, or Picard being tortured, or the crude sexualisation which is prevalent in Enterprise, etc, then I don't see anything in Discovery which is worse.
I'm just glad to have a show which deals with a topic like rape in a mature, adult fashion, rather than the juvenile way that TNG and Enterprise in particular did.
also it's not truly R rated until we have seen flaccid Klingon dick, full frontal.
It's a far, far better reason than "because it isn't needed" is a reason to remove anything. This is entertainment, not a targeted military operation."Because they can" isn't a good reason.
Exactly.And space as always been depicted as a violent and dangerous place. This is simply the depiction that it should have had all along.
^This, at least to a certain extent.it feels like this Trek is being taken away from younger audiences.
Thank heavens for this. I can finally fire my editor. She's forever going on about how this disrupts the narrative flow or that bit of dialogue or action pulls the reader out of the story or the other is simply unnecessary for advancing the story. Never mind that she's nearly always right. Any writer worth their salt knows that removing the stuff that isn't needed (or simply doesn't work at all) is every bit as important as getting the ideas on the page in the first place.It's a far, far better reason than "because it isn't needed" is a reason to remove anything.
True. Military operations don't require nearly the same level of planning and precision.This is entertainment, not a targeted military operation.
Language: As I have said in other threads, the language they have used reflects the way real people speak. Real people say shit and drop F-Bombs. Previous Star Trek didn't because that was not the audience they were going for. Discovery is going for a different audience that allows them to speak more authentically. Gore: Because when a monster starts killing things, odds are there will be gore. Unlike previous iterations of Star Trek that would just show a body laying on the ground which could just as well be sleeping, Discovery opted to go for the more realistic option of showing what the monster would actually do to the bodies. Discovery is made for a more mature audience, so why WOULDN'T they show a more realistic depiction of the aftermath?"Because they can" isn't a good reason. A good reason is that it adds to the drama positively. That it enhances it. I don't feel any of the examples I gave in the OP have enhanced it in anyway. I have asked if people think it does and so far nobody has told me how it does.
Discovery is not. Discovery is not for families, it is not necessarily about hope and positivity. It is a more mature Star Trek, thus TV-MA. You are looking at it through the lens of what it was instead of what it is. It has changed. You can like it or not, watch it or not, but this is what Discovery is. Asking why the tone of Discovery isn't like previous Star Trek's tone will get you nowhere, because the simple answer is because this is the tone the people in charge of the franchise have chosen to take. And they chose it I would imagine for a variety of reasons, because they want All Access to have more mature programming as opposed to what is on the CBS network (The Good Fight also features adult language); because they are trying to be in the same category as current cable fare such as Breaking Bad, Sons of Anarchy, Walking Dead, etc which feature more adult themes and language; because they think it will sell better overseas. Regardless of their reasoning, this is what it is. It seems to be reaching CBS's goals this way, so it is unlikely to change.Nonsense. I wouldn't advocate removing it from something like Alien or Predator, It adds to the plot. It's made for adults. But that isn't what Trek is. Trek is for families and is about hope and positivity, not gore.
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