TNG didn't 'feel' like TOS either, nor did DS9 'feel' like TNG. Both shows worked to establish their own unique identities, separate and distinct from what had come before, and that's what made them so memorable.RobbyB1982 wrote:The show is fine as a show. But it doesn't feel like Star Trek at all.
Voyager & Enterprise didn't do that, they continued on in the shadow of their predecessors. And both were characterized by laziness and mediocrity.
The funny thing is that much of the criticism against Discovery is not new.
Mad about revamping the Klingons? Well they revamped them in the 80s too, and fans spent decades bitching about it. And while I'd agree that they went a bit overboard, this time is a much smaller change from the previous one.
Too dark & to gritty? Doesn't 'feel like' or doesn't 'get' what Star Trek is about? They said the same about DS9.
And as for TNG, well, just give this a read.
I think that fans have this bad habit of fixating on a sort of 'platonic ideal', which they construct in their own heads. And then when they see something new, they judge it by how closely it resembles said ideal. Risks, creativity, and innovation are all punished as some sort of betrayal, while safe, predictable, familiarity becomes lauded as the highest aspirational goal.
When you do that, you end up ignoring the thing for what it actually is; the actual strengths and flaws of the work, all of its actual triumphs and failures, all ignored.
I'm not saying that anyone here has to like Discovery, but can we at least try to do it the decency of judging it on its own merits? Maybe acknowledge its successes, and criticize actual flaws, rather than simplistically screaming "THEY CHANGED IT, NOW IT SUCKS!"?
And maybe, just maybe, can we at least agree that regardless of how it turns out, it's good for creators to take risks and try new things?
Maybe?
Please?