Dude, you're a DSC fan, like the rest of us. You watch DSC and you go online and spend your time talking about it. Same for the rest of our hyper critical little friends here. You're just a different kind of fan from most of us, enjoying criticizing the show as much as others like general discussion or gushing about what they like.God how fanboyish are you for this series?
Kurtzman is well known to be one of the worst writers and producers in Hollywood. He is known for absolutely atrocious adaptions and shallow cashgrabs. This is why he is the Executive producer for Discovery, because Kurtzman is who you bring in when you have an IP you don't care about but think you can squeeze from money from and that shows with Discovery along with the rest of Alex's career.
If only they hired YOU as a writer. You'd straighten that whole mess out in like five minutes flat!
To be fair - is that concept any stupider than the "Picard will destroy humanity by creating an anomaly in the future that travels backwards in time; and do so because Q tells him of said anomaly..." concept of the much loved by many TNG fans TNG series finale??You're probably right. But I have to believe some of the most idiotic elements of the season - like the ISS Charon threatening the destruction of life in every universe - were due to intervention by one of the executive producers, not the writing team per se. It's just much easier to presume someone in charge is a moron and can insist on rewrites by fiat then it is to imagine everyone in the writing room is as dumb as bag of hammers.
Or future Janeway going back in time to save Tuvok? Why not undo it all?To be fair - is that concept any stupider than the "Picard will destroy humanity by creating an anomaly in the future that travels backwards in time; and do so because Q tells him of said anomaly..." concept of the much loved by many TNG fans TNG series finale??
This is definitely the pattern I've seen with people who don't like it.I barely remember the TNG finale maguffin, but it's not really the point. Similarly, I'd be more forgiving of Discovery's plot devices if the writing had succeeded in investing me in the characters or other aspects of the show. But the Discovery characters largely existed to serve the plot, and the plot was ... not good.
Yep.This is definitely the pattern I've seen with people who don't like it.
This is definitely the pattern I've seen with people who don't like it.
God how fanboyish are you for this series?
Kurtzman is well known to be one of the worst writers and producers in Hollywood. He is known for absolutely atrocious adaptions and shallow cashgrabs. This is why he is the Executive producer for Discovery, because Kurtzman is who you bring in when you have an IP you don't care about but think you can squeeze from money from and that shows with Discovery along with the rest of Alex's career.
What did Meyers have to do with Discovery? His only involvement with the series was "consulting" for Episode 2 which were all rejected. His producer credit on the Discovery team is entirely symbolic.
It's bad because it's poorly written garbage on every level, the writers don't understand basic storytelling, pacing, characterisation, dialogue.
Again, Alex Kurtzman, Avika Goldsman. The show had no hope in hell in ever being anything above lowest common demonimator cynical cashgrab with both of them attached.
I can say right now, nobody on the creative team with any power cared about making Star Trek Discovery good. It was a cynical cashgrab first and foremost and I suspect everyone knew this. The fact the show couldn't even get the Prime Directive correct shows the little amount of care put into it.
Here is the thing: Both Goldsman and Kurtzman say they love Trek. And I belive them! Wholeheartedly! I would even go so far as to say they probably even understand Star Trek pretty good.
I guess suspension of disbelief works differently for me. I can sit down, watch the events and dialogue unfold and be fully engaged in the characters without turning off my critical thinking skills. I enjoy because of my critical thinking skills, not because *click* and they're off.Well, suspension of disbelief is kind of key to enjoying fiction. At least dramatic fiction - since comedy is often based upon the unexpected happening, comedic fiction can get away with a lot of shit (breaking the fourth wall, out-of-place cultural references, etc) that drama cannot.
If you can't - whether through fault of the writer or your own personal foibles - sit back and turn off your critical thinking skills to enjoy the story being told, you're going to approach it not as a cohesive story, but a collection of events and dialogue constructed by the writers.
I guess suspension of disbelief works differently for me. I can sit down, watch the events and dialogue unfold and be fully engaged in the characters without turning off my critical thinking skills. I enjoy because of my critical thinking skills, not because *click* and they're off.
For me, I don't do mindless entertainment. I guess that's why accusations against the production team of mindless "pew-pew" bother me so much. There is little for me in the watching that makes stop thinking.
If it's bad writing, then it's bad writing, and I'm OK with that. I can accept that it is bad writing. Do I wish it was better? Of course, but I'm not going to sit there and act like I know exactly how I would make it better.
All the stuff that I know about Star Trek, it's history, the lore, the constant hours of reading books, that all informs me regarding Discovery, not just "Does it fit?" Because, well, that doesn't fit for me. It's taking Discovery, and really Star Trek, as it is, and not what I think it should be. Because, if it were up to me, TNG forward would vanish from existence all together. If I'm truly honest about it, I wouldn't even have TOS films. Just TOS and let it stand upon its own laurels.
Good thing I'm not in charge, right?![]()
Everyone is different.For me personally, if I'm truly engrossed in a work of fiction (which happens more with reading than watching movies or TV) it basically quiets down the internal voices. I just let the experience wash over me, and only really think about it after it's over. Almost as i a good book or movie is an act of meditation, and the self breaks down entirely. If I'm having internal monologue in the middle of it, chances are I'm losing interest.
I remember seeing The Blair Witch Project when I was in college. The beginning portion of the movie had me very heavily engrossed. Then, with about 15 mintues left in the movie, my bladder could hold out no longer, and I had to get up and take a piss. When I got back the movie was basically ruined. Just getting up and going to the bathroom "broke the spell" and I didn't feel any of the tension or fright the movie was supposed to be cultivating any longer. It just seemed silly.
Interesting. I can relate to this; it's pretty much how I experience entertainment, even when it's thoroughly immersive. There's basically no experience in life for which I do turn off my critical thinking skills; they're an essential part of who I am. It's definitely not a meditative experience, like Eschaton describes (FWIW I suck at meditating).I guess suspension of disbelief works differently for me. I can sit down, watch the events and dialogue unfold and be fully engaged in the characters without turning off my critical thinking skills. I enjoy because of my critical thinking skills, not because *click* and they're off.
For me, I don't do mindless entertainment...
..this is where you lose me. I just don't see how this follows from the sensibility you describe.If it's bad writing, then it's bad writing, and I'm OK with that.
Yeah, I'm mostly inclined to agree with you here. Some of it is fun, but very little of it actually adds anything to what Star Trek is....if it were up to me, TNG forward would vanish from existence all together.
I can find a reward in almost anything. I don't need it to "live up to" some standard to provoke and reward my investment.Interesting. I can relate to this; it's pretty much how I experience entertainment, even when it's thoroughly immersive. There's pretty much no experience in life for which I do turn off my critical thinking skills; they're an essential part of who I am. It's definitely not a meditative experience, like Eschaton describes (FWIW I suck at meditating).
The thing is, that means I generally prefer works that live up to and provoke and reward that kind of critical thinking. Which is why...
..this is where you lose me. I just don't see how this follows from the sensibility you describe.
I agree with almost everything you wrote wholeheartedly, with the exception of this.Here is the thing: Both Goldsman and Kurtzman say they love Trek. And I belive them! Wholeheartedly! I would even go so far as to say they probably even understand Star Trek pretty good.
I also don't think that intricate plotting is really needed in Trek. Some of the greatest Trek episodes are really simple, structurally speaking. The Inner Light doesn't have that much going on in terms of plot, for example, as it's all about character. Some excellent Trek episodes have a single twist at the end which causes you to reconsider everything, but this isn't required for every story.
However, having detailed and complex ploting is very much an element of "modern TV." Discovery backed itself into the corner it was in not because the writers didn't understand how to tell Trek stories, but because they decided to be far more ambitious in terms of storytelling than even DS9 attempted to be - and DS9 spent its first few years mostly as a warmup.
I'm not, either. I'm equally unsure about Ted Sullivan, and Berg and Harberts, and the rest of the less-senior people in the writing room, but Kurtzman and Goldsman are the easiest to evaluate based on their writing track records.The problem is, they aren't that great at recreating what makes Star Trek work. ... so far EVERY serialized threat on Trek has been about a clear enemy - the Dominion, the Xindi. But Trek doesn't live by that, in fact Trek lives by most plots not featuring clear and obvious Hollywood-type villains. But having an ongoing arc on Star Trek, without relying on a major villain, simply has never been done before. And now they HAVE TO do that... and I'm not sure Kurtzman and Goldsman are the people to pull it off.
It's a challenge, sure, but IMHO not as arduous a challenge as you make it out to be. Seems to me that any reasonably talented professional writer should be able to pull it off, and come up with story-driving conflicts that don't involve a "villain." Just look at the real-world news, where clear-cut villains are in short supply, but conflict definitely isn't. It could be a conflict over priorities, or over values, or over political principles, or over resources. It could be a challenge against nature. It could be a mystery to figure out, a discovery to make, a secret to keep, a problem to solve.The main problem is, every story needs CONFLICT to be a "story" and move the plot along. The "complex" part now is to create a "conflict", without having an enemy. ... It's a fucking NIGHTMARE to make that into a compelling "story", where each scene changes the situation and moves the plot along. If the final result is a pretty straightforward, "simple" episode, with a clear cut beginning, middle and end, it's a masterpiece of complex story writing.
Yeah, that finale still really throws me for a loop. It certainly undermined any pretense of showing respect for Klingons as a culture. In literally any other story (certainly any story set on Earth!), a character who attempted to unify all the world's governments under his/her personal control by threatening to blow up the planet would (unquestionably!) be the villain of the piece, and all the protagonists would be devoting their efforts to defeating this person. In this story, L'rell did exactly that with the help of our protagonists, and everyone went along with it, and it was treated as some sort of happy ending.Season 1 [of DSC] purely lived with the plot, dangling from one shocking twist to another, but losing steam and integrity on the way, until it all ended in utter schlock, a handheld bomb threatening the homeworld of the enemy, and throwing all logic and internal plot consitencyout of the way (Hey! Why didn't TKuvma tried to unite all klingon houses by holding the homeplanet hostage? Seems a surprisingly easy and effective way!).
That wouldn't be a solution in itself, but it would certainly help. We can only hope.What they need for season 2 is a more concrete vision of what to do with each of the characters. So that they need fewer plot twists, and we come back to see were the characters go, and thus they can have a more well-rounded story-arc that only has one or two major twists, which then in turn actually MEAN something.
Ending a war? Yeah, I'd be happy about that, even if I don't like the means.Yeah, that finale still really throws me for a loop. It certainly undermined any pretense of showing respect for Klingons as a culture. In literally any other story (certainly any story set on Earth!), a character who attempted to unify all the world's governments under his/her personal control by threatening to blow up the planet would (unquestionably!) be the villain of the piece, and all the protagonists would be devoting their efforts to defeating this person. In this story, L'rell did exactly that with the help of our protagonists, and everyone went along with it, and it was treated as some sort of happy ending.![]()
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