Beastro wrote: ↑Thu May 10, 2018 7:49 am
Asvarduil wrote: ↑Thu Mar 29, 2018 2:39 pm I personally find the "DISCO isn't really Star Trek" commentary to be disingenuous, because what usually is meant by it is, "I like Orville more than DISCO." The opinion is valid, and fine, the problem is that it's being delivered in an intellectually dishonest way. If you like one more than the other, you know what? It's OK to say that explicitly. There's no need for No True Scotsman fallacies.
I still haven't watched either, but what I meant was preserving some spirit of the shows in the way DS9 did while making a bug break with what was established in Star Trek with regard to its utopianism.
IMO, from what I've seen in threads like this and elsewhere STD doesn't understand that angle to the show while Orville is being too much fanfiction by revelling in it.
TGLS wrote: ↑Thu Mar 29, 2018 5:57 pm
Asvarduil wrote:
I personally find the "DISCO isn't really Star Trek" commentary to be disingenuous, because what usually is meant by it is, "I like Orville more than DISCO."
Either that or you're dealing with a TOS absolutist.
A DS9 fan and how it struck that above mentioned balance while in a lot of ways being closer to what TOS was than TNG was.
I'd agree on the point of the angle of the shows. DIS's writers don't yet have a firm grasp of what the show is and what it's really about. All of the first half of Season 1 to me is a reaction to current geopolitical trends first, though there are moments of good storytelling (and: Michelle Yeoh in a leather corset. We must never forget that). Chances are good that DIS is following the trend all Star Trek series have put forward: the first two seasons suck
Seh'lat balls...but at some point in the second season, someone has a flash of inspiration and forges the show into something with a real message. We're nowhere near that, though, so it's probably best to give DIS a couple of years to find itself.
As to Orville, I haven't
seen any episodes of it outside of Chuck's reviews, so my ability to discuss it is limited. Orville - based one what I've read of it - also has interesting ideas, but it's feeling like to me that the comedy angle is somewhat holding it back. Orville knows what it is and wants to be - Star Trek TNG fanfic, with added funny - but the problem is that Seth McFarlane I don't think understands how to make comedy in a space opera work; he's trying to leverage regular, run-of-the-mill humor, but in a setting as alien as a space opera, it doesn't tend to translate well. I think Orville would be funnier if there was more emphasis on high-brow humor, creative wordplay, and subversions of expectations. What's more, those sorts of comedic setups could also co-opt the more serious aspects of the script, and thus improve the quality of the final episodes.
Both these series have strong and weak points. I feel like DIS is much weaker than Orville, but DIS is a stronger Star Trek offering than what we've had hitherto - this first half of the first season is a lot more appealing than most of Enterprise,
and bear in mind there was a good bit of Enterprise that I found myself honestly enjoying. Both series I feel need to take a season or two and accept, then fix, their weaknesses. Still, there's some good potential in both shows, and I plan to enjoy both - not uncritically, of course, but based on the merits they both bring to the table. I'm not going to be a hardass because a series is or is not 'trekky' enough.