GreyICE wrote: ↑Thu Aug 27, 2020 8:04 am
It does kind of make sense. There's a bunch of scuzzy shit in our history we like to think is dead and buried, even if it's really not. Hell, the other thread someone was saying "black people might still be scared that the FBI are targeting black leaders like they did in the 60s" like it's not ongoing today. So it makes sense that they could just fade into the background after being semi-official - people want it to fade into the background, so they pretend it stopped, even if there's no evidence it stopped and evidence that it's still ongoing.
That definitely wasn't the problem I had with Season 2, not at all. Season's 2 problem more had to do with Deus Ex Machina as the only method of advancing the plot, everyone holding the idiot ball at amazing times, a tired rehash of a plot that was old when TOS was still airing, and a climactic episode that was mindless special effects porn and by halfway through I knew everything that was going to happen and I couldn't possibly care less.
That season finale pushed me very, very close to just declaring "I don't care what happens to these people."
Can't argue with that, while I wouldn't go as far as say anyone was holding the idiot ball, the main storyline wasn't that interesting for me because as you say it was moved along with Deus Ex Machina's and that the story of A.I. gaining sentience and wanting destruction of all life has been done and was only here to give Season 2 of Star Trek Discovery a big bad.
Personally I think Star Trek Picard does this far better as it wasn't about defeating the synthetics from another galaxy, but showing that artificial life has just as much right to exist, that there are people that will fight for that right, and that they have a choice, and to not become the very people who would destroy them and take away that right and choice.
With Discovery I found the rest of the plots more interesting, like Ensign Tilly's encounter with May and the adventure in the Mycelium Network, Doctor Culber's resurrection and dealing with that, which for Star Trek I'm super happy that they actually explored someone coming back from the dead and all the phycological issues from such an experience, Commander Saru and exploring his culture, continuing Ash Tyler's story of trying to find purpose, and yes, Commander Burnham trying to reconnect with Spock.
And I like all the added lore like with Section 31, the creation of the Klingon D-7, the Klingon Temple of Boreth, and the return of Captain Pike, Number One and the USS Enterprise, which I love the Discovery design of both the exterior and interior, and of course I really enjoyed all the characters, and the acting was fantastic.
"I think, when one has been angry for a very long time, one gets used to it. And it becomes comfortable like…like old leather. And finally… it becomes so familiar that one can't remember feeling any other way."
- Jean-Luc Picard