Pike called his first officer Number One in the Cage.
Pike called his first officer Number One in the Cage.
Jadeb:
Yeah, she came off as more human than Vulcan for sure. I thought she'd be a lot more Vulcan-like.
They changed the look of everything. Why focus on the Klingons? They're as similar to the old ones as much as the ships and unis are.
I can live with that. I am sad that this concept was the one chosen to restart Trek on TV. Having that opinion does not mean I hate the show or refuse to give it a chance.
You know, maybe this is why Sarek was so disapproving of Spock being in Starfleet at first. He didn't want any more long-distance calls from officers in a jam.
Yeah, I'd be concerned that not enough happened to reel enough people in. There was no pew-pew, just drawn out scenes with weird looking aliens in rubber masks. The confrontation between Burnham and the first Torchbearer was almost engaging, but then it was over. We didn't even see Burnham get rescued, which robs us of an exciting moment.I think just showing the first episode by itself like that seemed like an odd choice. Since I was on the stream, part 2 auto-played seamlessly.
As it was presented, it really was just one episode and I think they should have broadcast the whole thing as such. I think it will prove to be a mistake by CBS.
First thoughts. Subject to change.
- The Klingons are foreign and like nothing we've seen before, and they are not Ridgeless. But there was a comment made, that some of the coffins were thousands of years old. Perhaps these are Klingons that have existed in a complete vacuum?
- Burnham was irritating. She seemed like me to be a human that was way too excited to try and include Vulcan teachings in her life. For all intents and purposes, she was raised Vulcan, but humans don't have the same grasp of emotions that Vulcans do, so it seemed odd for her to be trying to act so Vulcan, and at times it came off forced.
- The captain, I forgot her name already, seemed forced in her calling Burnham "number 1". I felt like that was something that only Picard did, but I could be wrong, and feel free to correct me. Besides that, she was alright. I guess.
- Graphics were impressive, very very impressive. I liked the design of the Shenzhou overall, it was interesting and brought to life very well with the new graphics.
- How are they going to rationalize all that technology, being it's only ten years before TOS?
- More on the Klingons; I liked that they brought more culture into it and are delving into something we haven't seen with the klingons before. The Sarcophagus-Warbird was awesome. Who the hell is Voq and why is he white? I'm not sure how I feel about that. I have heard that there will be flat forehead Klingons as well as more traditional TNG-style Klingons in later episodes, and I look forward to this.
Have to bring down a starship?
Very much like Burnham too.
Sarek is fine. But Frain is a dud. He lacks the necessary screen presence for such a strong-willed character. And the Vulcan stoicism eludes him. I'd take Ben Cross in a heartbeat.
This is gonna turn out to be Majel's character.Pike called his first officer Number One in the Cage.
I liked how he kind of leaned back onto what might have been a desk or something during his conversation with Burnham. The gravitas!
I never thought I would see a day where Star Trek fans would turn out to be as cynical as some sections of the Star Wars fandom, but apparently I overestimated the Trek fandom's level of maturity.
The only possible way The Vulcan Hello could be seen as "shit" is if people want to be negative simply for the sake of being negative.
I don't think so. I think the main Klingon wants to unite the (current) 23 warring houses and said as much. So, if he's ancient, then he's at least well-versed in the current actions of the Empire.
Pike did too, and he's Captain Georgiou's contemporary.
Meh. TOS and Discovery are both in the future. They have the same technology, we just didn't see it all.
I really, really, really like the character of Voq, son of None. It may or may not tie into the story of The Albino from DS9, but it definitely reminds me of things like Martok and his commoner's perspective amongst the Klingon nobles. It's nice to see the classist hierarchy that always existed within the Klingons acknowledged and expanded upon.
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