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Good Lord. Heaven forbid TPTB at least attempt to flesh out characters with backstories. I mean why go that route? Why not rely on the premise of previous sci fi shows in which the only conflict is the situation the characters are in rather than the struggle the characters have within themselves and with each other?
Seriously some of you love your sci fi to be simple like the other Stargate series, TOS, TNG, the original BSG....Buck Rogers! Hey, those shows were successful and I enjoyed a few of the quite a bit myself. But just as the hour long dramas/cop shows have evolved from the days of "Dragnet" isn't it a good thing that sci fi shows are evolving too? I guess not for those of you who want your characters totally honest, pure, likable, funny, etc. If a character has a flaw you want it to be a superficial flaw that really doesn't amount to anything. You want your sci fi to be so escapist to the point it has nothing to do with how we as people operate in the real world. You can't imagine yourselves devoting time to sit and watch a show with people you don't find endearing or amusingly quirky who spit out witty comebacks at rates that would shame the Gilmore Girls.
Okay. We get it. Hopefully more shows like that, those easily accessible-comfort food shows, will be coming your way in the near future since that's your preference. Heck, if another type of those series comes around that is as well done as TNG or the first five years of SG1 comes around I may watch too. But in the meantime count me as one of those who like the evolution of science fiction shows. From DS9 to B5 to Farscape to Lost to the "nu BSG", I see it as wonderful that these other shows aren't afraid to be darker, aren't afraid to rely more strongly on continuity, aren't afraid to have true character development and change, aren't afraid of TRUE conflict and aren't afraid to present us characters with serious warts. I can't speak for others but as I have grown older my tastes have changed and I tend to like shows that are more sophisticated. I gave SG:Atlantis a try for a little over a year but I found that I could not take that forced cuteness of that show and its naked lack of ambition any longer. Some folks actually think those characters were great. Okay. I don't see it. Those characters didn't grow, didn't have interesting back stories, didn't bring anything fresh to sci fi television. They were nothing more than amiable friends to tune into once a week. And if that's how people like their characters of their shows to be then so be it. Others though, like myself, want something different. And after seeing the type of growth I got with characters on B5 and DS9 I can never go back to investing my time in characters who are as paper thin as the cops on CSI:Miami.
Granted I had lots of problems with the new BSG. Lots. It is not one of my all time faves (in fact I would still take TNG over it). Nonetheless I can appreciate how different it was and how fresh it was. Basically I give Moore and Co props for trying to do something new in this science fiction TV genre even if they weren't always successful at what they attempted.
Stargate Universe has its share of problems so far too which I hope will get straightened out or corrected. But I'm willing to give it a chance. Do I have a bit of a problem with Greer being a stereotypical Angry Black Man? Yes, and my problem with it will only grow if TPTB don't flesh out his backstory and make us understand him better. That being said at least I find the character interesting as a result of all the issues he seems to have. That's an improvement at least over Lt Ford who was nothing more than a token sidekick in SG:Atlantis. As I asked in a previous post which stereotype/caricature is worst? Is Ford acceptable to some folks because he smiled a lot? He wasn't to me. I was frustrated with him because TPTB had no interesting developments for his character until he was transformed.
Also why the nitpicking of some of the solutions and inconsistencies of SG:U as if the other Stargate shows did not resort to some of the same bs resolutions and scenarios? That's just being hypocritical.
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Obviously I'm out of sync with contemporary fashion, but I think it's very sad to see Stargate sink to this level. Stargate was never my favorite franchise, but it was good Space Opera and consistently well done; to see it become a juvenile nuBSG clone is painful. The mother with the booze dribbling from her chin made me cringe and the junior high school dramatics between the Army loser and the alleged scientist was incredibly embarrasing. Nothing here but adults behaving like disturbed adolescents for the sake of forced conflict; the Ron Moore view of life.
At least the camerawork wasn't as distractingly sloppy as it was last week. Maybe they're just using that as a gimmick to suck people in and will segue to a more professional look. Hopefully they'll do that with the writing as well.
And it just makes me shake my head that this incredible vessel from an incomprehensibly advanced civilization that can cross the distances between galaxies looks like something from Star Wars on the outside and an abandoned 1940s warehouse in Fall River on the inside. What do people have against imagination these days?
This.
You'd think being stranded billions of lightyears away on a broken down spaceship with no food would be enough conflict for any show, but I underestimated the nu-BSG era. That's nowhere near enough conflict for a good show. Every character needs to have a deep, dark backstory and be constantly threatening to kill each other. Cause that's how the real world works.
The only thing keeping me watching the show right now is Eli. I can almost see him as the fifth member of SG-1 and I like that.
Good Lord. Heaven forbid TPTB at least attempt to flesh out characters with backstories. I mean why go that route? Why not rely on the premise of previous sci fi shows in which the only conflict is the situation the characters are in rather than the struggle the characters have within themselves and with each other?
Seriously some of you love your sci fi to be simple like the other Stargate series, TOS, TNG, the original BSG....Buck Rogers! Hey, those shows were successful and I enjoyed a few of the quite a bit myself. But just as the hour long dramas/cop shows have evolved from the days of "Dragnet" isn't it a good thing that sci fi shows are evolving too? I guess not for those of you who want your characters totally honest, pure, likable, funny, etc. If a character has a flaw you want it to be a superficial flaw that really doesn't amount to anything. You want your sci fi to be so escapist to the point it has nothing to do with how we as people operate in the real world. You can't imagine yourselves devoting time to sit and watch a show with people you don't find endearing or amusingly quirky who spit out witty comebacks at rates that would shame the Gilmore Girls.
Okay. We get it. Hopefully more shows like that, those easily accessible-comfort food shows, will be coming your way in the near future since that's your preference. Heck, if another type of those series comes around that is as well done as TNG or the first five years of SG1 comes around I may watch too. But in the meantime count me as one of those who like the evolution of science fiction shows. From DS9 to B5 to Farscape to Lost to the "nu BSG", I see it as wonderful that these other shows aren't afraid to be darker, aren't afraid to rely more strongly on continuity, aren't afraid to have true character development and change, aren't afraid of TRUE conflict and aren't afraid to present us characters with serious warts. I can't speak for others but as I have grown older my tastes have changed and I tend to like shows that are more sophisticated. I gave SG:Atlantis a try for a little over a year but I found that I could not take that forced cuteness of that show and its naked lack of ambition any longer. Some folks actually think those characters were great. Okay. I don't see it. Those characters didn't grow, didn't have interesting back stories, didn't bring anything fresh to sci fi television. They were nothing more than amiable friends to tune into once a week. And if that's how people like their characters of their shows to be then so be it. Others though, like myself, want something different. And after seeing the type of growth I got with characters on B5 and DS9 I can never go back to investing my time in characters who are as paper thin as the cops on CSI:Miami.
Granted I had lots of problems with the new BSG. Lots. It is not one of my all time faves (in fact I would still take TNG over it). Nonetheless I can appreciate how different it was and how fresh it was. Basically I give Moore and Co props for trying to do something new in this science fiction TV genre even if they weren't always successful at what they attempted.
Stargate Universe has its share of problems so far too which I hope will get straightened out or corrected. But I'm willing to give it a chance. Do I have a bit of a problem with Greer being a stereotypical Angry Black Man? Yes, and my problem with it will only grow if TPTB don't flesh out his backstory and make us understand him better. That being said at least I find the character interesting as a result of all the issues he seems to have. That's an improvement at least over Lt Ford who was nothing more than a token sidekick in SG:Atlantis. As I asked in a previous post which stereotype/caricature is worst? Is Ford acceptable to some folks because he smiled a lot? He wasn't to me. I was frustrated with him because TPTB had no interesting developments for his character until he was transformed.
Also why the nitpicking of some of the solutions and inconsistencies of SG:U as if the other Stargate shows did not resort to some of the same bs resolutions and scenarios? That's just being hypocritical.
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