Self contained stories within a season long arc sounds very appealing. I'd prefer more stand a lone episodes with stories that vary in style. What I don't want is one long episode that takes 13 episodes to reach a conclusion.Well, adult is in the story telling itself, not so much the way it's done. IE, to meet both points in the middle, an episode like "City on the Edge of Forever" leaves you with the impression that Kirk is going to deal with the events that transpired for a very long time. Hence "Let's get the Hell out of here."
On the other hand, having things like foreshadowing, and building up characters over many episodes, and having things twist and turn along a longer span is also very effective. (See: Babylon 5's Londo and G'kar for beautiful examples of that.)
I do hope Discovery manages a little of both. Even though it will be serialized, I do agree with BillJ, having some of the mystery that goes along with a self-contained story would be great. One way to do that is to have an individual episode tackle a particular event/scenario, but have the themes of that story tie into the overall arc, or the events of that story effect a character and cause them to make a decision down the line.
One example I can take from Babylon 5 is, there is an episode early on that involves a woman using an alien device to help heal people of their illnesses. Well, it turns out this device is actually a form of capital punishment and is sucking a little of her life each time she uses it. If used at full strength it will kill one person and completely rejuvenate the other. It's a standalone story, but the device is brought back up again later in the series on two different occasions. So, you can do stand alone stories, and then build off of them down the line.
They'll have an explicit sex scene between two unjoined Trill that climaxes in...You think they will depict oral sex in the show at all?
They'll have an explicit sex scene between two unjoined Trill that climaxes in...
"I bet you can't fit your whole head in my symbiont pouch."
There's no childhood nostalgia gonna happen for Chris Pine Kirk, because in today's climate there's no edited for TV, tape and watch it as a family audience. That model has changed so much, and now execs chase adult collectors rather than where fandom used to start.
I don't know. You may be underestimating the power of cable. The new movies are going to be running constantly on cable for today's kids, the way TOS played endlessly in syndication when I was a kid. And it's not like we watched TOS reruns as a family back in the day; it was just something that was always on TV, like Gilligan's Island, Bewitched, or Wild, Wild West, that the kids watched while the grown-ups were busy.
Somewhere as we speak, there's some kids watching INTO DARKNESS on cable for the umpteenth time while their folks are doing something else, or maybe watching their own shows on their own devices. And those kids are going to grow up with fond memories of watching Pine and Quinto and Saldana and the rest . . . .
(Meanwhile, I admit to being wryly amused that "taping" a movie is now regarded as childhood nostalgia. Trust me, there were no VCRs when I was a kid; you watched a show when it aired or not at all.)
Yup. Time marches on. My five year finds my old VHS fascinatingly alien.
And your point about. Cable is true...but misses out that 'edited' nature. There used to be less violent cuts of films, or softened language, entire different scenes, that meant parents were OK with kids watching stuff. Or would watch stuff together. I wouldn't let my little one watch TWOK, or TSFS, because the only edits we have are the full versions... the versions I watched at his age were editted for TV. As it stands , there is no new Trek for the under tens...which is when I started.
My parents drew the line at Laugh-In. SF and horror were fine, but not "adult" comedy. I used to sneak out to the hallway to secretly watch.Hmm. I was seven or so when TOS debuted, but I never remember my parents worrying that it was too intense for me. And maybe I'm wrong but it seems to me that the new Trek movies are no more violent or disturbing than the average sci-fi action movie, so would modern parents really worry about letting kids see them? It's "fantasy violence" as the movie ratings say.
Then again, my dad was a horror buff who practically raised on me on old monster movies, so I may have a skewed perspective here.
(I'm perversely proud of the fact that my littlest brother saw his first Boris Karloff movie when he was only eight days old, all because Mom and Dad left the baby alone with big brother for a few hours. "Here's your bottle; here's your burping blanket, that's THE MUMMY on TV.")
Maybe worse would be only occasional have "unsuitable for kids" and they never let it be known in advance when one of these special episodes is going to be on.Fixing it so every episode is unsuitable for kids is a daft move.
My parents drew the line at Laugh-In. SF and horror were fine, but not "adult" comedy. I used to sneak out to the hallway to secretly watch.
I recall going to see Tommy when I was around 16, but also on the bill was a film called Friends, which featured a bit of nudity and sex.My parents vetoed ROSEMARY'S BABY when I was nine, more for the sex than the scares. I remembered being disappointed at the time because . . . devil baby! (Chances are, though, I would have actually found the movie too slow and talky at that age.)
Later, the shoe was on the other foot and I've had to make all sorts of tricky judgment calls regarding various siblings, nieces, etc.
One time, a local revival house ran a double bill of HEATHERS and BLUE VELVET. I took my tween sister to the former, but drew the line at the latter: "Don't even think about it. We're leaving at intermission."![]()
Maybe worse would be only occasional have "unsuitable for kids" and they never let it be known in advance when one of these special episodes is going to be on.
Be nice if they would have something on a website that told you "in the next episode at 17:35 there will be a unsuitable for children scene that will last for about 30 seconds."
Some things that are suitable for some children might not be suitable for others.
Some things that are suitable for some children might not be suitable for others.
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