Did YOU bother to read her quote. She said they had to scramble to get extensions to do the reshoot(s).
To tell you the truth, I just skimmed really fast.
Did YOU bother to read her quote. She said they had to scramble to get extensions to do the reshoot(s).
If (and this is a big if) they can come up with something unique I would be interested. VOY had some interesting concepts, if inconsistent, and I think "Scorpion" is among the best of the Borg stories. However, things like "Unimatrix Zero," "Dark Frontier," and "Endgame" all muddied the waters quite a bit and reduced the Borg from enigmatic to petty.I think the Borg still are a very interesting concept - the best "evil" Star Trek race in fact. Just that they haven't been handled that great recently. ("Alien 3" to "Alien vs. Predator" come to mind). But still full of potential if someone would tap them with a new idea, and just a neat thing to have around.
Hollywood has self-esteem problems. Sadly, this is not unique to Star Trek.I'm still ok with it. Borg origin. If it is. I surprise myself. I have been WAY happier with the Spock-Burnham-family soap opera arc than I thought I would be. Because oddly I wanted more for DSC than it wanted for itself (go off and have its own adventures rather than be connected at the hip to TOS; it's like the showrunners had self-esteem probs.).
IDIC.How can anyone rate an episode so flawed and ordinary as this as a 10 ?
Ash having a Top Secret Section 31 discussion over comms with Controleiland in a public corridor while officers are walking/rolling past kills me.
You must have hated SG-1 then.
The entire premise of the show from the get go was that the Goa'uld were going to take over the entire GALAXY!
Well, I can't say for sure that you're wrong. But, I suspect you are.Let me say it this way: If it turns out NOT to be the Borg, and only be a Easter egg or a slight nod (say, future Control was aware of Borg technology and tried to mimick the assimiliation part) - it'd be time to rewatch the last few episodes in a much, much, much more favourible light.
Right now, it looks like a car accident in slow motion, where the worst part technically hasn't happened yet, but you can pretty much picture the outcome already, and it's going to be gut-wrenching.
Weren't they only in "Context Is For Kings" (DSC)? I think the implication is that they were gone by the time Tyler came aboard, because he says in "Point Of Light" (DSC) that he has "heard of" but "never seen" them, and he was Security Chief.I thought Disco was a Section 31 ship. They have guards in some places with the black badges.
Weren't they only in "Context Is For Kings" (DSC)? I think the implication is that they were gone by the time Tyler came aboard, because he says in "Point Of Light" (DSC) that he has "heard of" but "never seen" them, and he was Security Chief.
-MMoM![]()
Initially, the only connection between the Sphere and the main plot arc was that it was one of the emergencies to which the Red Lights led the ship. It was a pretty good story in its own right, and exemplified the Trekian principles of nonviolence and exploration. Control needing the data was grafted on later, and still doesn't make any particular sense even though it's been explained a couple of different ways.The Sphere is obviously related to the main plot. Control needs its data. ... Keep the data out of Control's hands and sentient life survives.
She said that, yes. IMHO it seemed oddly contradictory to the presentation of the RA throughout the previous episodes, which involved just a handful of carefully (and mysteriously) selected interventions across the timestream. If Mama Burnham really has been watching all of history, and creating (and seeing the end of) multiple timelines, one is compelled to wonder how she can even remember it well enough to keep everything straight — i.e., why is her own perspective not constrained by the "current" timeline? And also to wonder why she felt compelled to save Michael in the previous episode, if she's already seen her die umpteen times. And also how she even stays sane, frankly.And, the audience doesn't have to assume. Dr. Burnham stated that she tried many things to keep the data out of Control's hands but nothing work. So, we know.
Not quite sure how that landed in this dicussion, but FWIW, some people just like a sense of adventure, you know? They're not content with the path of least resistance. Why do you think extreme sports are so popular? Heck, why do you think people have ever left comfortable homes to go explore a frontier?And as far as the TNG era is concerned, if life on Earth was so Utopian, how in the hell would Starfleet get recruits...
No. And that's why the supposed stakes of the storyline shouldn't be "OMG maybe everyone will die!" It's way more interesting (and less predictable) when the stakes are about what happens to the characters on a personal level, or to the new alien they just met, or to the planet they just discovered.Sorry, I never get this line of thinking as given the nature of EVERY TV show like Star Trek, the audience KNOWS in the end the ship, main characters, etc. will survive and triumph at the end of the story. Are you REALLY believing "OMG! everyone will die!" when you watch an episode?
Exactly. This. Many of the best episodes of TOS (and TNG, and DS9) were about this....we can comprehend personal loss or how it affects our relationships and community.
Speaking for myself, I wouldn't rewatch the first season of any Berman-era Trek series. Can't imagine why anyone would, really. So if that's the quality bar you're setting for DSC, it's pretty damn low...If this is what you consider "letting them down" I'm amazed you can watch the first season of any Berman era Star Trek series.
Are you seriously suggesting that SG-1 represents the high-water mark for SF TV, and if someone doesn't enjoy it then there's nothing better to choose from?How can you stand ANY Sci-Fi TV then?
Hear, hear. I love SF (on screen or in print); it's one of my favorite genres. But a badly told story doesn't get bonus points just for being in that genre. On the contrary, if anything I'm liable to judge it more harshly, because it betrays its own potential and misleads others about what the genre is capable of.I just want good television. For example, to me Stargåte is just rather bad television show. That it is scifi, doesn't make it any better. I rather watch a good crime show than a bad scifi show.
How do you figure? There's The Expanse and Counterpart and Game of Thrones and Colony and The Man in the High Castle and Westworld, and that's just off the top of my head, within the SF/fantasy genre, among shows that are currently airing. Go back in time a bit and you can add Lost (despite the bad finale) and nuBSG (ditto) and Firefly and Buffy and Babylon 5... step outside of genre material and you can add a whole host of shows from amongst current "peak TV," not to mention older shows ranging from The Wire (IMHO a contender for best TV show ever) to The West Wing all the way back to M*A*S*H... and that's still just off the top of my head. Sturgeon's Law applies, yes, but the world of TV is so vast, the top 10% still offers enough selection to keep anyone watching for a long time.If you want that, there are very few series for you to watch!
Hear, hear!I'm ready for a new peril after 53 years, one that might actually happen. And a show that lets serious bad things happen, so when the stakes are high, the bad effect might come to pass.
I think a number of us here have done a solid job of describing how utterly fucking stupid a retcon that would be. I'm still clinging to the hope that you're wrong and @SolarisOne is right and it's a misdirect, though. If the vast majority of us here can agree that it's a dumb idea, I have a hard time imagining how all the folks in the writers' room could have escaped that same conclusion.It's hard to actually describe how utterly fucking stupid a ret-con that is. And yeah - "assimiliating Patar", "Struggle is pointless" "Order by any means necessary", the green nanobots - it's the Borg. And it's probably the dumbest idea possible.
Actually, there are oodles of Iron Man suits (did you see IM3?)! So the story logic here is even more simplistic than that.This show treats science with comicbook logic: There is only ONE time-travel suit. Even if it's 20 years ago. No one will ever built a new one, there are now existing records - it's only this one, the same way there is only one Iron Man suit.
Word. When the writers can't even be consistent from one episode to the next why Control needs it, it might as well be waving a sign saying McGUFFIN in neon capital letters. (And it's a shame, because it only serves to undermine what made the Sphere episode enjoyable in its own right.)The sphere's data is the dumbest McGuffin possible.
Again, right on the money. Control didn't get more than a couple of (inscrutable) passing mentions in dialogue before the episdoe where Cornwell sketched out the exposition on what it was, which happened to be the same episode in which we discovered it had been corrupted/gone rogue.THe main problem for "Control" actually being the big bad (and amplified for when itwill become the Borg) is WE KNOW NOTHING ABOUT CONTROL.
We don't know the user-interface. We don't know how it works when it's supposed to work (is it only on that station? On every ship? On Earth?) Who and what for it was created, and how in the hell it was meant to analyse threats in the first place? Like, how is it fed data?
I thought Disco was a Section 31 ship. They have guards in some places with the black badges.
I think Star Trek would do well to be let die if this is the case.IMHO, if a new Star Trek show doesn't clearly deserve a space in that top 10%, then it has an uphill battle justifying its existence at all.
IMHO, if a new Star Trek show doesn't clearly deserve a space in that top 10%, then it has an uphill battle justifying its existence at all.
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I wouldn't go that far. I have every expectation that with Michael Chabon and Patrick Stewart involved, the Picard series that's in development will more than justify its existence.I think Star Trek would do well to be let die if this is the case.
I wouldn't go that far. I have every expectation that with Michael Chabon and Patrick Stewart involved, the Picard series that's in development will more than justify its existence.
But DSC? That's another story. I certainly didn't say a show had to be serious to be good, and many of the ones I mentioned can vary in tone quite a bit! When DSC is at its best I have fun with it (as kind of a sentimental guilty pleasure), but it's seldom at its best. And when it tries to be serious, it often gets even worse, and the contrast with genuinely well-written shows gets even more glaring.
More than anything else, the problem is that it's just wildly erratic. Until a couple of weeks ago I was pretty consistently enjoying S2, but then things took a really abrupt nosedive.
Stewart had a big hand in what Insurrection and Nemesis turned out to be. I think the value of his personal involvement in assuring his show will be a top 10% out of the gate could be considered in some quarters (mine for one) wishful thinking.
Yes, this is why despite my trying to be positive about the Picard Series, I have this persistent feeling in the back of my mind that I won't like it as much as Discovery. And for more reasons than just my default opinion of, "I like the 23rd Century better than the 24th."
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