Is it wrong to love both the original and the new design from Discovery?
We don't need to pick sides or anything do we?
Checking for a friend...
FWIW I found myself enjoying DSC by (mostly) increasing amounts through the first half of the season, and then by (rapidly) decreasing amounts through the second half of the season.
To the extent that I've enjoyed it, though, all along it's been despite its quixotic design choices, conflicts with Trek continuity, and plot-driven writing style, though, not because of these things.
Going into the season, based on the show's choice of setting and format, I was hoping for something that captured the
look and feel of original
Star Trek (which I love, unapologetically), paired with the
sophisticated storytelling techniques of today's long-form serialized television (like, say,
GoT or
Sense8 or
The Expanse or the new show
Counterpart or name-your-favorite). Instead the final product has been a disappointment on both counts — something that falls back on tired and predictable TV writing tropes, dressed up with production values that look expensive but are overly stylized and only nominally related to Trek. It's got potential, but most of it remains unrealized, and it has a long way to go to win me over.
And to tie this to the thread topic... as far as how that unrealized potential might play out, I cheerfully admit that I loved seeing the
Enterprise at the end of the season finale... except that I
didn't actually see the
Enterprise, just a deliberately altered imitation of it. (At least they didn't change the TOS music. That evoked exactly what it was meant to evoke.)
Because trek dies if it does not grow. We know from CBS pre Kelvin the average age of a Trek fan is 40+ years old. It is not buzzwords, its freaking business. You must grow your brand or it dies, this is simple fact. You have to bring in new fans and that will simply not happen if it looks super dated. I know you do not want to hear that, but its a simple fact man.
Oh, c'mon, that's bullshit. Star Trek is one of the most widely recognized fictional franchises on the planet. It has a
massive body of TV episodes and movies, not to mention books and other merchandise, that continues to sell, and to attract new fans on an ongoing basis. It wouldn't "die" even if not a single new Trek show or film were ever released... and it's not as if that's going to happen, because it
is so widely recognized, and its owners are going to make sure new product is released on a regular basis. In the last 39 years, Trek has never gone more than four years without some new project being put in front of audiences.
That doesn't mean we, as those audiences, are obliged to worship at the altar of any or every new Trek project that comes along, or even to watch them. I thought VOY was crap, and I said so. I thought the Abrams films were crap, and I said so. I think DSC is better than either of those, but also not without serious flaws, and I'm hardly going to refrain from criticizing it.
Star Trek will survive, no matter what. If DSC isn't a popular success, CBS will come up with something different before long. If CBS can't make money on Trek, then (first) they don't deserve to be in the entertainment business, and (second) they'll sell it to some other company that will. In the meantime, if we as fans don't criticize versions of Trek that deserve criticism, then we deserve whatever second-rate material we get.
(Consider, just by way of comparison, Sherlock Holmes. The canon there is 56 short stories and four novels, period, and nothing new will
ever be added to it. All that's been created in the last 90 years are pastiches and adaptations, and most of those adaptations frankly suck. That does not in any way, shape, or form diminish the brilliance of the originals, however, nor their ability to attract new fans. Holmes is the single most famous fictional detective in the history of fictional detectives, and he's never going to "die." Even though he's a period piece, and Victorian settings aren't "in trend.")
He choose to ignore the fact trek's style has always went with the current sci-fi design trends. Look at it by decade and you can see this clearly. It matches the style of other sci-fi products of the time.
Yes, Trek has changed its design aesthetic over time. Usually fairly cautiously and incrementally (TMP notwithstanding). When it introduces
new material — ships, settings, time periods. What it has
not ever done before (with the notable exception of the Klingons) is retroactively change the look of something
already established.
I would dispute, BTW, that these changes have "matche[d] the style of other sci-fi products of the time." TNG, for instance, had a look distinctively different from anything else that defined SF in 1980s media. It didn't look a thing like
Star Wars. Or
Blade Runner. Or
V. Or
Max Headroom. Or
Aliens. It was, on the other hand, instantly recognizable as an update of the already established and distinctive look of Star Trek.
If it looks nice or not is subjective. But the fact its used and still in demand, means most people think it looks good or at lest in the right direction.
No, it really, really doesn't. Trends come and go, often with little or no connection to whether more than a few people actually like them.
(I hate to imagine what the
Doctor Who relaunch would have looked like in your hands...)
Exactly. CBS has models and datasets to support their choices, good, bad and everything in between.
Really? You honestly think that network executives are making reasoned decisions based on careful analysis of valid data? Your faith is touching. Perhaps you have never read anything at all about Hollywood?