This is Star Trek. I expect better of the politics.You've lived long enough, you understand how politics works.
^_-
This is Star Trek. I expect better of the politics.You've lived long enough, you understand how politics works.
^_-
The more things change, the more they stay the same.This is Star Trek. I expect better of the politics.
Uhhh no.Not really. It was meant as an action adventure with science fiction trappings. The two pilots featured soft ideas, including ESP, the transporter and such. Through the show there's a shift from scientific knowns to fictional ideas, going from lasers to phasers, and lithium to dilithium
It had some great ideas from writers and designers and certainly captured the imagination it was not hard science fiction.
Well, a wonderful nonanswer.The more things change, the more they stay the same.
Even in a Star Trek future, where GeoPolitics are replaced by Grander Scale AstroPolitics.
That doesn't make it hard sci-fi. And there's nothing wrong with that idea. Star Trek has always had a great mix of different concepts and stories, and human drama. Where the drama takes precedent, tech is going to get less grounded.Star Trek is grounded for the most part in scientific principles
I prefer the realism and detail myself. Obviously for story telling purposes there can only be so much but I want it to sense, and I like the interconnectedness you get when you're able to connect dots from different parts of the Trek universe because there is some sense to it all.Probably a controversial opinion in itself, but I like Star Trek best when it's abstract and feels almost non-literal. The more detail or "realism" writers try to add to the setting, the less appealing it is IMO.
I like it as a world where space is just an endless expanse of adventure, and doesn't quite make sense (hence why you can be at a starbase one week and beyond known space the next week, and why we can encounter a tiny defenceless planet one week and a brutal interstellar empire the next, without needing an explanation as to how the former hasn't been destroyed by the latter despite ostensibly existing nearby).
A lot of the Klingon politics stuff in TNG fails for me, along with DS9's war arc and SNW's callbacks, because it's all trying to connect the dots in a setting that, in its best moments, totally resists any kind of consistent logic between stories. The planets, species, and lifeforms work best as symbols and allegories rather than attempts at depicting believable civilizations.
Definitely a rare take. Season 1 of TNG is terrible in my opinion and I struggle to even watch the episodes. S3 might be the best, so I see you there.These have already been said on the first few pages of this thread, but...
I think TNG seasons 1 - 3 are generally the show's best, and that DS9 starts to go very badly wrong from late season 4 onward. Even with Voyager, where I mostly agree with the popular perception that the show improves from the point Seven joins, I think the first three seasons are good and have a certain something that's lost later on.
The thing about TOS is that about 40% of it is the worst shit ever put on TV, but an additional 40% is quite good, and the remaining 20% consists of the best Star Trek ever made.
plagiarism lawsuits?Was there anything that Harlan did like, besides being an insufferable curmudgeon?
I have always put the extreme Worf love (by male ST fans) down to "The Wolverine Syndrome". Young males whether consciously or subconsciously are attracted to these hyper stylized versions of masculinity but don't want to face their own latent homosexual feelings. I've pondered this for DECADES now.
Later TNG feels overly stolid to me, while the early seasons - though much less tightly-written, perhaps - are a lot more creative and unpredictable. Picard's characterisation later on drives me up the wall too.I honestly don't understand how you can even prefer the early seasons of TNG, DS9, and VOY vs their later seasons. Though I understand from a story standpoint perhaps preferring their stories initially developing versus them in mid or closing arc.
TOS isn't my favourite Star Trek but something about the tone of the first season sticks with me in a way none of the Berman-era stuff does - space feels totally unknowable and unreal, and the ship feels almost like a floating theater stage that's drifting from one mythic morality play to another.I prefer the realism and detail myself. Obviously for story telling purposes there can only be so much but I want it to sense, and I like the interconnectedness you get when you're able to connect dots from different parts of the Trek universe because there is some sense to it all.
I met him ages ago, I thought he was very friendly and pleasant, we had an interesting conversation about composition.
TNG Worf doesn't seem like a figure of hypermasculinity to me:Worf is one of my least favourite characters in STAR TREK. Between the two series he appeared in, he CONSTANTLY vacillated between the Federation and the Klingon Empire to the point where it became annoying and at times is dumb and ignorant. I have always put the extreme Worf love (by male ST fans) down to "The Wolverine Syndrome". Young males whether consciously or subconsciously are attracted to these hyper stylized versions of masculinity but don't want to face their own latent homosexual feelings. I've pondered this for DECADES now.
In addition to the previously cited examples from Reunion and Blood Oath, in DS9 Sons of Mogh Sisko chewed Worf out for trying to kill Kurn in accordance to Klingon cultural practices, even saying he will not tolerate murder in the pursuit of respecting other cultures. Granted, Sisko did turn a blind eye to Worf later killing Gowron, but that had more to do wit Sisko's personal feelings on the matter rather than official Federation or Starfleet policy.The UFP / StarFleet is tolerant of Klingon Cultural Practices & the option to kill on occaision.
Granted, Sisko did turn a blind eye to Worf later killing Gowron, but that had more to do wit Sisko's personal feelings on the matter rather than official Federation or Starfleet policy.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.