I've grown to appreciate the Orville after initially disliking it. The humor in the first half dozen or so episodes was just a little off-putting for me. Upon re-watching the pilot, I found it to be a pretty clever sci-fi story and love the concept of the giant flash-grown oak tree destroying the enemy ship. But, upon my first watch, all I could take away from it was the opening scene with the blue alien and the blue forehead splatter ejaculating all over the place. In fact, the episode in which blue alien returned, was the only episode I skipped.
I think the two best episodes were the final two episodes of season one, when the ship discovered the two-dimensional plane, and the Church of Kelly episode.
I agree with those that say that the storytelling seems to almost always closely resemble a previous Trek episode. At least, to my eyes. But "Star Trek homage" is built into the show's DNA, so I can't really hold that against it.
At any rate, I'm glad that they're getting a third season. With the abbreviated episode count (compared to BermaTrek), it really took two seasons for the universe to really fully establish itself. I look forward to seeing where it goes.
Yeah, Orville's humor is hit or miss at times but even the worst of it (the gravity distortion field being a "glory hole" was arguably the worst by far) pales to most coming from Seth's cartoon shows. But they're few and far between and what actually works is far, far better. I still dislike the concept of "humans have not evolved since the 20th century", as contrary to what some people think, it's not normal people we're watching but abnormal people. Take someone from the 16th century into ours - they're not going to act like us or vice-versa. Both Orville and DSC run around issues by making their crews
"accessible" glorified transplants of 21st century people into the distant future where there's no jacksplat way people of the future would be even remotely like what we are today. Maybe that's in part why some people see both Orville and DSC as being parody of Star Trek...
The pilot episode I too rewatched and it really was more than the bunch of Family Guy jokes set in space that people were conditioned into believing. Even the redwood joke at the end had my howling due to successful comic timing. The horror and sci-fi elements didn't make me think of any Trek episode - though, yes, some Orville episodes do clearly have Trek-like seeds but the Orville episodes smartly makes them
their own instead of playing "storytelling by numbers', which is insulting to the audience. For the most part, I am still vocal about the Orville episodes that are so sub-par in part because that's all they really did. And the worst episodes are all from season 2. The "character-driven" one, but season 2 also had the
best episodes. Despite season 1 feeling a lot more creative with the sense of adventure and ideas.
Orville's first season, after the first three or four episodes, is quick to find its own direction (eps 2-4 definitely come close to templating Trek and the one with the big asteroid with people inside, had just enough of interest going on for me to roll with what was obviously "For the world is hollow and i touched the sky" on steroids. That's big because it was grating that the show wasn't doing that much more with the concept, it was the use of characters that kept me interested enough but I could tell it wasn't the strongest episode and it came after the second Bortus episode (#3, episodes 1 and 2 were fairly solid). But later episodes quickly showed they would do much more and make things their own instead of having the viewer count the number of sci-fi references, they worked to keep the audience in
their show.
There's no way "Majority Rule" and "Into the Fold" had any Trek references, even the former felt more like a "Sliders" one (as had the asteroid one - it's an interesting meld of two shows' styles, innovated on and trying to make its own thing. Which is easier to do with plots than characters.) But a couple of "This would make a neat Sliders episode!" thought, the episodes still felt more like Orville than anything remotely like a connect-the-dots rehash. And, yes,, "Majority Rule" did yank out the "parallel development" plot point that TOS had to justify raiding the wardrobe closets and sets from other shows made at the same time to cut down costs. But the content beyond the
plot vehicle was so strong that it was The Orville I was watching, not a rehash of Sliders. Real innovation takes work to get above and beyond what's being innovated on. It's not easy to do and even DSC deserves sympathy, if they really were trying to build up something in a way that wasn't meant to be "co-opting" or "retconning" but stumbled.
The Church of Kelly episode I
adore, despite not remembering the title, though it's plainly obvious they took inspiration from both Futurama and Star Trek Voyager (which took inspiration from TOS and if we looked back far enough there's bound to be something involving a bunch of people stuck in a craft they can't steer, it's simply not a new trope regardless of what the vehicle not being steered is) but they took it in yet another direction while making the scenes of the latest historical development interesting and compelling. A real carbon copy cutout wouldn't be interesting or engaging. The innovative difference was on full display in that episode.
"New Dimensions" is an outright classic. 2D is not a new concept but HOW Orville played with it absolutely made it new and refreshing, exciting, and compelling. If TNG did this, all we'd see for an hour is Picard pine over all the 2D critters they're killing due to a situation beyond their control and then he'd drop the shields and it'd be a really stupid series finale for TNG... Assuming there's life approaching anything sentient, and so on.
Or, in fewer words, "Hear Hear!"
