This is all basically what they're doing with DSC season 3.
They could do that with Discovery. I would have liked to see them reset and wipe their existence from the prime universe and end up in a completely different galaxy so control couldn't get to them.
Except that Three's Company is itself a remake of a 1973 british sitcom called Man About The House.It's a case of "to each, their own" then.
Personally I'd hate to see Gilligan's Island or M*A*S*H or Starsky and Hutch or Three's Company or Cheers or any other classics remade just so younger generations can have "their" version. To me, if something is good, it's good and you accept it for what it is regardless of when it was made.
We're not talking about Sherlock Holmes or a Shakespearean play here, we're talking tele and I don't think shows need to be updated every 10-20 years because creatives draw a blank and taken the easy path.
And I find very few remakes/reboots are as good as the original.
Except that Three's Company is itself a remake of a 1973 british sitcom called Man About The House.
Except that Three's Company is itself a remake of a 1973 british sitcom called Man About The House.
The inherent problem with a Voyager reboot is the same problem that the original Voyager had: The concept of being stranded in an unexplored part of the galaxy took a back seat to the trope of actually trying to leave that setting to return to the familiar (i.e. the premises of 'getting back to Earth' and 'we're a Starfleet crew,' etc., which ended up being translated as 'this unexplored part of the galaxy is really not all that different from the galaxy we're already familiar with.') So you just end up with more of the same, which Voyager (and ENT) was accused of being.
Similar to what was recently done with lost in space. Now, Lynx won't like this, but that style of storytelling might also make it possible to show the Ocampan lifespan in real time. Indeed, I've already seen something close to that done in the animals of Farthing Wood, a very serialised animation based on a series of novels about a group of animals searching for a new home. Of these, some turned out to be short lifers, even within a four season timespan.I agree that Voyager needed to focus on them being lost, but that doesn't necessarily mean they'd have to stay put as in Farscape.There's no reason the basic idea of being stranded and trying to get home couldn't work.
The problem was the original scenario lent itself more to conflict and storylines within the ship, but for whatever reason they decided to resolve all that basically right away and make something that was trying too hard to be TNG. A good reboot would:
That would actually work better now since modern viewing habits tend to allow for longer arcs than the episodic style Voyager used, which almost always resulted in hitting the 'everything back to normal' button at the end of each episode.
- Keep the Maquis separate for much longer.
- Develop more tension between Janeway and Chakotay - that relationship is probably the biggest missed opportunity in all of Trek.
- Make the characters the main story.
- Replace the episodic monster/planet of the week thing with larger stories spanning multiple arcs or seasons.
- Focus in on what makes Voyager's situation different. No fucking holodeck. Actual wear and tear to the ship. Much greater focus on the lack of supplies and resources.
I agree with this and really would like to see this. The other side is the potential for reconnecting with Starfleet. Not as a "we made it home" bit but as an encouragement that they are not always alone. Again, a bit of hope and not the oft heard complaint of "Well, they definitely are not making it home so why care?"
- Keep the Maquis separate for much longer.
- Develop more tension between Janeway and Chakotay - that relationship is probably the biggest missed opportunity in all of Trek. I'm still staggered they tried to tease a romance between them. Terrible.
- Make the characters the main story.
- Replace the episodic monster/planet of the week thing with larger stories spanning multiple arcs or seasons.
- Focus in on what makes Voyager's situation different. No fucking holodeck. Actual wear and tear to the ship. Much greater focus on the lack of supplies and resources.
I agree with this and really would like to see this. The other side is the potential for reconnecting with Starfleet. Not as a "we made it home" bit but as an encouragement that they are not always alone. Again, a bit of hope and not the oft heard complaint of "Well, they definitely are not making it home so why care?"
I think that Starfleet vs. Maquis would be a similar (note, not identical) way of thinking. I know that the Tuvok training episode certainly touched on that theme but I would enjoy seeing that work done over a season.
The butcher bird impaling the baby mice was pretty horrific.I'm loving The Animals of Farthing Wood being used for comparison. I still remember the sorrow in my class when the hedgehogs were run over.
I think that is one of the big challenges in VOY is allowing actual conflict within the personalities. I think having those leadership styles, especially if there is a couple of more junior officers stepping in to those roles, and getting things wrong. And, I think you're right that Janeway often could be portrayed as flawless or at least always right. Which means there is no room for getting things wrong because Janeway is going to fix it.You'd have the more withdrawn official leader who could perhaps be a little more objective about things when you need to make tough decisions set aginst the more passionate and 'natural' leader who could command authority but wouldn't actually be the best person to get them home. Conflicts between Chakotay and Janeway would have actually had something behind them, and you'd have the underlying threat of Chakotay simply seizing command or even having command thrust upon him. As it is, Janeway was portrayed as essentially flawless, which meant Chakotay and Tuvok didn't have much to do from a storytelling perspective.
I have a soft spot for Voyager as it was the Trek series that got me into the franchise. It was only when I watched some of DS9s arcs, and episodes of TNG and TOS that I realised how much deeper Trek could go.
I still think Voyager had one of the best premises for Trek or any sci-fi show out there and there were some great episodes and ideas within it. However it just felt like it failed to hit the peaks of other Trek shows or come close to reaching it's potential, so why not have a do over?
Here are some reasons why I think a reboot would work.
- It will be a show going back to Trek roots. Exploration and dealing with the unknown.
- It can exist outside of all current Trek. It could even be sold as Kelvinverse Voyager.
- It would be a great way to bring in new viewers to Trek as the show could be made in a way where it didn't need much prior knowledge of the Trek universe.
- It doesn't need to be faithful to the original and they can pick and choose to reuse the best story arcs, characters, aliens as well as adding completely new ones. It would feel fresh for new and old viewers alike.
(eg instead of the Borg as a big baddie it could be an evolved form of Control)
- It's perfect for modern serialization and streaming.
Any other reasons for or reasons against a reboot?
I don't want it to be rebooted because "rebooting" is such bull. After the success of the TOS movies, they wanted to revive ST on TV. They didn't remake TOS, they opted for fresh new characters and ideas, something different and unique. And it worked.
I was disappointed in the movie "reboots" because I didn't want to see different actors play the TOS characters any more than we'd like to see someone else play Picard. It felt like a cop out to recreate what had already been done, and it really robbed us of a new generation of new Star Trek.
Why would I want to see Voyager rebooted? Do something new.
Oh trust me, they'll have a new and younger Picard actor ready by the time Sir Patrick Stewart hangs up the tights in a couple of years. Just like they did on X-Men.I was disappointed in the movie "reboots" because I didn't want to see different actors play the TOS characters any more than we'd like to see someone else play Picard. It felt like a cop out to recreate what had already been done, and it really robbed us of a new generation of new Star Trek.
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