It's my fourth favorite Trek series right now.
I was under the impression that all "Srar Trek" installments were heavily dated, to the point that I suspect it's done deliberately now, for traditions sake.I'm at Episode 5 of Strange New World's S1 and I must say the show works if you treat it more as an extension of the overly lavish, still believable The Motion Picture and not the relatively shoestring, boxed in TOS show that is deeply rooted in the 60s (like TNG was rooted in the very late 80s and 90s).
Can't lie, that episode was quite dumb. And T'Pring has fast gone from an interesting one-off character from classic "Trek" to a groan-inducing pain in the backside, ranking down there with Wesley Crusher. She's just like Klyden on "the Orville"--the audience rarely sees her doing anything other than making a main character's life difficult, but we're expected to believe he has good reason to stay invested in this relationship. And I don't even know why she needs to be in the show; I was under the impression that she and Spock were betrothed by arranged marriage, but didn't really know each other. I wish it had stated that way.Got to the episode of Spocks body swap and gave up. I did give it a go, but it's not my cup of tea.
She's just like Klyden on "the Orville"--the audience rarely sees her doing anything other than making a main character's life difficult, but we're expected to believe he has good reason to stay invested in this relationship.
And I don't even know why she needs to be in the show; I was under the impression that she and Spock were betrothed by arranged marriage, but didn't really know each other. I wish it had stated that way.
I'm back-and-forth on the "best season ever" thing.
The first year of TOS is the foundation of Star Trek. They built the "universe" and defined what Trek was and would be...
I think SNW (and LDS before it) have been their respective creators' versions of "how I would do X type of Star Trek episode". SNW did a submarine warfare episode ("Memento Mori"), a wromp-y bodyswap episode, a full horror episode, a full fantasy episode, etc. LDS has had more time to flesh out its version of the universe and is now going deeper with its own internal characters, villains (Pakleds!), and references. I think SNW will start stretching its wings a little more given time. Hopefully season 2 will be that time....What was missing from this season for me was an episode or episodes that seemed truly original - that introduced some brand new idea, theme, character, or plot that had no similarity to anything previously explored in Trek, or depicted an event or turn of events utterly unlike anything we've seen previously in Trek. Too many of the episodes, enjoyable as they were, felt like retellings or variations of familiar tales that we've seen before...
I too have really liked most of the stories. Episodes 2, 4, 5, 7, and 10 were more standouts than the others, but there was a lot to like in all but episode 8 (Elysian Kingdom), and even then there were a couple of nuggets that I would have preferred them to explore more than the pointless, but fun for the cast, fantasy roles.The stories are great.
Yeah, I agree. I think the writers wanted to explore a Vulcan relationship, but that they aren't really making Spock out to be head over heels into this relationship. I think he has been "enjoying" it in a Vulcan way, but the moment duty pressed on him, he was ready to skip out on T'Pring.Are we, though? I don't think it's at all clear that the narrative wants us to think Spock has a good reason to stay with her.
Seems to me the writers wanted to explore what a Vulcan relationship -- and a Vulcan break-up -- would look like.
The variety has been nice. I have enjoyed seeing these showrunner's takes on various Trek plots and ideas. And when one episode isn't so hot, it doesn't end up torpedoing a whole season's worth of storyline.What has surprised me is that each episode has had a quite different flavour. In a short season of ten episodes, that variety is quite a brave choice and has given the characters and actors plenty to play with.
Really enjoyed waiting for each instalment.
Yeah, I agree. I think the writers wanted to explore a Vulcan relationship, but that they aren't really making Spock out to be head over heels into this relationship. I think he has been "enjoying" it in a Vulcan way, but the moment duty pressed on him, he was ready to skip out on T'Pring.
Well, it took a while after TOS. Not everything works the same way twice, but Pike's close enough to Kirk to really bring back TOS. Better than TNG.Someone -- after all these years -- is finally getting the *soul* of Star Trek. Someone gets the real formula!
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