I love Emissary, it is my favourite Trek pilot, but I didn't like it when I'd only seen Emissary. I liked it when, as a seasoned DS9 fan many years later, I rewatched it.I'm not always the biggest fan of DS9, but I think Emissary is mastercraft.
I love Emissary, it is my favourite Trek pilot, but I didn't like it when I'd only seen Emissary. I liked it when, as a seasoned DS9 fan many years later, I rewatched it.I'm not always the biggest fan of DS9, but I think Emissary is mastercraft.
I hear that a lot. But I was the absolute opposite. I loved it so much. I remember the day after at school (I would have been in eight grade, then.) it was of course the topic of the day at lunch. All my friends did the #notPicard thing, but absolutely gushed about it.I love Emissary, it is my favourite Trek pilot, but I didn't like it when I'd only seen Emissary. I liked it when, as a seasoned DS9 fan many years later, I rewatched it.
I think we watched it at a similar ageI hear that a lot. But I was the absolute opposite. I loved it so much. I remember the day after at school (I would have been in eight grade, then.) it was of course the topic of the day at lunch. All my friends did the #notPicard thing, but absolutely gushed about it.
I was actually a pretty die-hard Niner until my mid twenties -- or four or five years into TBBS.
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 tend to think everyone needs to acknowledge this is a reboot. Sure it has some sounds, and nods towards what came before. But it is its own thing, in its own universe.
For the same reason that TMP did it.They are rebooting the TOS universe for some weird reason. Well at least rebooting the visual continuity of TOS.
Very much the same. As soon as I was into the reality of watching it, I think canon entered my head exactly once - the holocommunicator. Other than that, I just didn't care, and the fact it was a prequel, or didn't look like TOS, or any of that, just went completely out of my head.I must not be a real fan, because watching this I didn't think for a second about canon, continuity, rebooting universes and visual continuity.
"Let me help. A hundred years or so from now, I believe, a famous novelist will write a classic using that theme. He'll recommend those three words even over I love you. "The 100 years absence of the Klingons annoyed me a little, seeing we already have the Romulans doing the same thing. Their make-up doesn't bother me because I either use the TOS/TMP rationalisation or that there's been different Klingon tribes we're seeing. But the Klingons felt off, like if they're always this warrior culture just attack already and stop waiting for reinforcements. How many songs are sung in Stovokor about a whole fleet whooping one Starfleet ship's ass. I maintain that seeing one Klingon being kickass at his job and taking names is better than a whole bunch of nameless chumps.
Things like the holo-communicator can bring me out of a story, too. Because I keep thinking about the practicability of the idea. When they are talking to the admiral on the bridge, for example; what is he seeing on his end? The whole Shenzhou bridge crew? Just Captain Georgiou? Wouldn't it be totally confusing for someone to use this technology, having to parse two sets of surroundings at once?Very much the same. As soon as I was into the reality of watching it, I think canon entered my head exactly once - the holocommunicator. Other than that, I just didn't care, and the fact it was a prequel, or didn't look like TOS, or any of that, just went completely out of my head.
Ooooook.
Sarek sits on Michael's desk - that was the point that threw me first, actually, and then later the bit with the Admiral giving orders on the bridge - were those aimed at Shenzhou's crew, or the Europa's? How would each crew know that?None of that has anything to do with established Trek canon, though. Although I do understand what you are saying regarding holograms on later shows such as Voyager. I guess the key difference would be that this kind of hologram can't really interact with the surroundings it appears in. It can't touch anything, for example.
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