Interesting question!
I saw the trailer - the Klingon look doesn't bother me, but the set designs and flashy visuals are as at much odds with TOS as ENT's looks were. It's inevitable, so hopefully the scripts and acting will rise above what viewers are going to expect. But that goes back to the argument of why not continue the timeline instead of another prequel that might have the right plots but looks all wrong?
I'll have to see the episodes, but I've never been happy with prequels in general. They rarely bring anything truly new, what is brought in tends to mess up known continuity and/or reduces the impact of the existing shows and spinoffs, and we know how it all the prequel ends thanks to all the shows and spinoffs the prequel is trying to build up. The concept has rarely worked well or there's no real vision to put in the missing pieces.
It's possible "Rogue One" has broken the trend, people I know have only said good things about it and how it genuinely bridges the gap while maintaining continuity.
I saw the trailer - the Klingon look doesn't bother me, but the set designs and flashy visuals are as at much odds with TOS as ENT's looks were. It's inevitable, so hopefully the scripts and acting will rise above what viewers are going to expect. But that goes back to the argument of why not continue the timeline instead of another prequel that might have the right plots but looks all wrong?
I'll have to see the episodes, but I've never been happy with prequels in general. They rarely bring anything truly new, what is brought in tends to mess up known continuity and/or reduces the impact of the existing shows and spinoffs, and we know how it all the prequel ends thanks to all the shows and spinoffs the prequel is trying to build up. The concept has rarely worked well or there's no real vision to put in the missing pieces.
It's possible "Rogue One" has broken the trend, people I know have only said good things about it and how it genuinely bridges the gap while maintaining continuity.