The refit is indeed a thing of beauty, it takes an already great design and just makes it that bit more honed and awesome in every way.
In terms of Berman, I think he was always very good at getting the show made (and indeed, before things went sour he had the reputation of having saved TNG from Roddenberry's poor choices in the first season by guiding it to the peak of TV Trek's popularity), but his choices of who to handle the writing/creative side of the various shows were wildly inconsistent.
So when it worked, Michael Piller being a prime example, you got fantastic televsion. When he made poor choices (and I guess we all have our opinions on that), it just fell apart.
Braga is a great example of that- He wrote some brilliant off the wall insane episodes of TNG, and he's definitely someone you'd have wanted on staff to do a couple of really out there format breaking episodes a year.
But he was clearly a poor choice as showrunner (especially for a show like Voyager where the basic set up of a crew stranded and on a long quest really didn't play to any of his strengths) because that was basically all he could do, so you end with with every other episode feeling like a technobabble bore fest where weird shit happens to the crew with no lasting consequences to them.
I also think by the end of the '90's Berman- and to be fair many of the other people involved- had let the development of television over the preceding decade pass them by completely, DS9 is the only one of the post TNG shows where it felt as if it was being made by people who'd actually seen some other TV made after 1987. Enterprise tried to rally round and do something that felt modern at the end, but the final result looked more like your dad dancing at a disco.
In terms of Berman, I think he was always very good at getting the show made (and indeed, before things went sour he had the reputation of having saved TNG from Roddenberry's poor choices in the first season by guiding it to the peak of TV Trek's popularity), but his choices of who to handle the writing/creative side of the various shows were wildly inconsistent.
So when it worked, Michael Piller being a prime example, you got fantastic televsion. When he made poor choices (and I guess we all have our opinions on that), it just fell apart.
Braga is a great example of that- He wrote some brilliant off the wall insane episodes of TNG, and he's definitely someone you'd have wanted on staff to do a couple of really out there format breaking episodes a year.
But he was clearly a poor choice as showrunner (especially for a show like Voyager where the basic set up of a crew stranded and on a long quest really didn't play to any of his strengths) because that was basically all he could do, so you end with with every other episode feeling like a technobabble bore fest where weird shit happens to the crew with no lasting consequences to them.
I also think by the end of the '90's Berman- and to be fair many of the other people involved- had let the development of television over the preceding decade pass them by completely, DS9 is the only one of the post TNG shows where it felt as if it was being made by people who'd actually seen some other TV made after 1987. Enterprise tried to rally round and do something that felt modern at the end, but the final result looked more like your dad dancing at a disco.