And continuing stories are only good for a few episodes. Not an entire season.
Then why are we all so ga-ga for Babylon 5?
Disagree strongly. I certainly don't subscribe to the idea that arcs are the end all and be all. I think episodic tv has its place and I count many episodic series among my favoritesAnd continuing stories are only good for a few episodes. Not an entire season.
Agreed
no story can really be spread over 24 hours
could you clarify what you mean by soapish melodramas? You mean relationships or romance being included.most shows that do try rapidly devolve into soapish melodramas
Disagree strongly. I certainly don't subscribe to the idea that arcs are the end all and be all. I think episodic tv has its place and I count many episodic series among my favoritesAnd continuing stories are only good for a few episodes. Not an entire season.
Agreed
no story can really be spread over 24 hours
However, saying that no story can be spread over 24 hours is just not true. Look at season one of Heroes. That season was packed full of plot development, storylines, characters and nothing except one or two things felt like filler. As long as you don't spin your wheels or drag things out and forge ahead unremittingly with plot advancement it can be done and has.
In fact, there have been some arcs that I felt should have been expanded because there was just so much material that could have been addressed and mined such as DS9's Final Chapter.
could you clarify what you mean by soapish melodramas? You mean relationships or romance being included.most shows that do try rapidly devolve into soapish melodramas
I'm not sure I understand what you're referring to here. If you mean that the show would have to break, or at least the evolve, the formulas of TOS and TNG then that's a good thing. If you mean what he was saying about his idea that the crew would return home but realize that they no longer belonged to the culture of Starfleet, then that too would be a good thing. It would give the audience a more than they were expecting. He certainly never advocated disregarding basic canon or to deny that the ideals of the Federation be something this crew would work towards.His critiques are lousy. He's basically saying that to make VOY work they just have to disregard every prior episode of Trek from every series.
And that would be a bad thing why?His critiques are lousy. He's basically saying that to make VOY work they just have to disregard every prior episode of Trek from every series.
And that would be a bad thing why?His critiques are lousy. He's basically saying that to make VOY work they just have to disregard every prior episode of Trek from every series.
That's total nonsense. No new Trek show can destroy what was good about the older shows. The good Trek of the past will always be there.It's pretty much saying that the work every past person and every past actor put into the series is negligible and it's okay to throw it all out and shove the finger in their collective faces saying "I want to do this, and if it means getting rid of all the hard work you put in, nyah-nyah!".
He wasn't saying that. But if that would produce a show that's more entertaining than what we got with Voyager, then yes, I would say throw out the holy canon.And yeah, he was pretty much saying they should disregard basic canon and that Trek ideals are worth throwing away because being animals is better.
Well, he didn't have to think about whole ST canon in BSG, and it is still not more entertaining than Voyager, not for me.He wasn't saying that. But if that would produce a show that's more entertaining than what we got with Voyager, then yes, I would say throw out the holy canon.
I'm still utterly confused as to what you mean by him throwing away canon. That would consist of willful contradiction of facts, not something he advocated without a full re-boot, or unless a minor point should be fudged to service a story. But canon has nothing to do with changing the philosophy of Trek. Changing the dates and starship registries and what happened when has to do with canon.'Why would it be a good thing' is the real question. It's pretty much saying that the work every past person and every past actor put into the series is negligible and it's okay to throw it all out and shove the finger in their collective faces saying "I want to do this, and if it means getting rid of all the hard work you put in, nyah-nyah!".
And yeah, he was pretty much saying they should disregard basic canon and that Trek ideals are worth throwing away because being animals is better.
Agreed. To each their own, but I found the episodes of nBSG I managed to slog through unrelentingly dreary and it featured some of the most thoroughly uninteresting and unpleasant characters I've seen in any TV show. Others feel differently and that's great, but it tells me that Moore Trek isn't something I'd care for at all. Thus, for me, he's not the answer.Well, he didn't have to think about whole ST canon in BSG, and it is still not more entertaining than Voyager, not for me.He wasn't saying that. But if that would produce a show that's more entertaining than what we got with Voyager, then yes, I would say throw out the holy canon.
Exactly. Win-win for all, really.If he can't write new interesting ST stories and episodes without throwing out the whole canon, then he shouldn't write more ST, he's just not the good person for that. He can work on other shows instead, like he is doing now.
No, you're not the only one around here who likes Voyager.I liked Voyager pretty much. Am I the only one in these boards who liked it, and thinks it didn't need a big change to be good? Some little changes would make it better, but I never wanted it to be much more darker or much different.
Just the fact that they couldn't go to a starbase whenever they wanted would have meant they would have had to improvise repairs and conserve resources. There should have been a makeshift patch of metal somewhere on the hull, relaxed dress codes, some more clues that they were adapting to the situation instead of simply living in denial of it. The replicator can't do everything. It still requires power and matter. They'd need to stop off at planets for batteries and stuff so Janeway, a scientist captain, would need to learn better diplomacy. There's room for an arc there.
People will always challenge ideals, if only to provide a check and balance for those same ideals. Otherwise we're just blind soldiers worshipping Big Brother and chanting slogans that put us in our place. Those that don't question their faith are pawns of those in power.
Any two people that could truly call themselves human would have different points of view. No matter what the over-arching philosophy of the Federation was, just the fact that they weren't computers meant that there would be conflict. That should always be exploited for drama. The Maquis point of contention may have been the DMZ on the surface, but it was also a philosophical dispute and the fact that these people they resented were now ordering them around. Even if they all had the same goal, to get home, they wouldn't all agree as to the best way to go about that. See my point above about any two humans.
And inter-personal conflict is well-established in all Trek, even TNG. On that show there were several episodes in which it was a civilian or Starfleet Federation member that was the villian of the piece.
All of these things are just basic to writing stories. In order to tell stories in the milieu of Trek one must first know how to write stories. Moore knows how to write stories. Moore knows Trek. Generally he's done a good job on the shows that he's written. And I think he's been pretty fair about his time on Trek. His commentary on First Contact was pretty positive, and he and Braga were fair about where they didn't quite reach their grasp on the Generations commentary too.
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