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4 votes
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Star Trek: Lower Decks S01E01 - "Second Contact"
15 votes -
Christopher Eccleston returns to Doctor Who - Big Finish
15 votes -
Star Trek: Lower Decks | Trailer
23 votes -
Foundation | Teaser
21 votes -
Star Trek: Lower Decks sets release date for August 6th
5 votes -
How 'Star Trek' made history twenty-two years ago with a same-sex kiss (2018)
10 votes -
Bajoran culture is my feminist and queer inspiration
11 votes -
Where does my main battery go?
8 votes -
Space Command S01E01 — The greatest 'Star Trek' type show you're not watching right now
14 votes -
Revisiting Star Trek’s most political episode: In 1995, the Deep Space Nine installment “Past Tense” stood out for its realistic, near-future vision of racism and economic injustice
14 votes -
Mr. Plinkett's Star Trek: Picard review
8 votes -
How remastering ABC TV show 'The Stranger' after fifty-five years brought joy to its star, Ron Haddrick, in his dying days
4 votes -
‘Black Mirror’ creator says the world is too bleak for season six
21 votes -
Disney Gallery: The Mandalorian trailer - 8-episode behind-the-scenes documentary series debuting May 4 on Disney+
5 votes -
Tales from the Loop | Official trailer
6 votes -
Westworld | Season 3 trailer
19 votes -
Kirk Drift: "Womanizer" Captain Kirk and false memories of pop culture
16 votes -
Altered Carbon | Season 2 trailer
11 votes -
'The Stranger' was Australia's first locally-produced science fiction television show and one of the first Australian series to be sold overseas
ABC's media release: 'The Stranger' was Australia's first locally-produced science fiction television show and one of the first Australian series to be sold overseas. (Ignore the references to...
ABC's media release: 'The Stranger' was Australia's first locally-produced science fiction television show and one of the first Australian series to be sold overseas. (Ignore the references to 'Doctor Who'; the only connection they have is that they were both science fiction shows made in the mid-1960s. I suspect that show is name-dropped just to get people's interest.)
I've been watching this show. I'm 5 episodes in, which means I'm up to the last episode of the 1st season, with another 6 episodes in the 2nd season (only 12 eps in total).
It's bad but also good (not in the "so bad it's good" way). The production isn't great: the special effects are low-grade, the sets are ordinary, the acting ranges from hammy to wooden, and the writing is clunky. However, despite all that, I find myself hooked. I want to know what's going to happen next. It's an interesting premise: the remnants of an alien species eking out an existence inside a rocket-equipped moon, having left their home planet after an unspecified ecological disaster, to seek out a new home. The plot is good enough to drag me along with it. It also has historical curiosity value.
I doubt it's available outside of Australia, but here's the streaming link. Be warned: it's very slow-paced to start with. The first episode doesn't even mention aliens, and the second episode only has hints.
7 votes -
Star Trek: Picard S01E02 Maps and Legends
Picard begins investigating the mystery of Dahj as well as what her very existence means to the Federation. Without Starfleet's support, Picard is left leaning on others for help, including Dr....
Picard begins investigating the mystery of Dahj as well as what her very existence means to the Federation. Without Starfleet's support, Picard is left leaning on others for help, including Dr. Agnes Jurati (Alison Pill) and an estranged former colleague, Raffi Musiker (Michelle Hurd). Meanwhile, hidden enemies are also interested in where Picard's search for the truth about Dahj will lead.
8 votes -
Star Trek: Picard S01E01 - Remembrance
Taking place 20 years after Star Trek: Nemesis, we'll be finally reunited with Jean-Luc Picard as he takes on the next chapter of his life. S01E01 - Remembrance At the end of the 24th Century, and...
Taking place 20 years after Star Trek: Nemesis, we'll be finally reunited with Jean-Luc Picard as he takes on the next chapter of his life.
S01E01 - Remembrance
At the end of the 24th Century, and 14 years after his retirement from Starfleet, Jean-Luc Picard is living a quiet life on his vineyard, Chateau Picard. When he is sought out by a mysterious young woman, Dahj, in need of his help, he soon realizes she may have personal connections to his own past.
Anybody can create this thread! If you see the episode first, do it up!
29 votes -
Doctor Who S12E04: Nikola Tesla's Night of Terror
What did you think of this week's episode of 'Doctor Who'? Previous discussions: Doctor Who S12E03 'Orphan 55' Doctor Who S12E01 'Spyfall'
9 votes -
Doctor Who S12E03 'Orphan 55'
What did you think of this week's episode of 'Doctor Who'? Previous discussions: Doctor Who S12E01 'Spyfall'
6 votes -
‘Star Trek: Picard’ officially renewed for Season 2 by CBS before January 23 premiere
6 votes -
Patrick Stewart didn't want to reprise Captain Picard in a post-Brexit world
23 votes -
Devs | Season 1 official trailer
8 votes -
Doctor Who S12E01 'Spyfall'
What did you think of this week's episode of 'Doctor Who'?
6 votes -
The Mandalorian | S01E08: Redemption
The Mandalorian and his companions finally confront Moff Gideon. Previous: S01E01+2 S01E03 S01E04 S01E05 S01E06 S01E07
11 votes -
The Mandalorian | S01E07: The Reckoning
Didn't see a post yet so thought I'd make one. An old rival extends an invitation for The Mandalorian to make peace. Previous: S01E01+2 S01E03 S01E04 S01E05 S01E06
11 votes -
Amazon just released 'The Expanse' season four a few hours early
11 votes -
The Mandalorian | S01E05: The Gunslinger
The Mandalorian is set after the fall of the Empire and before the emergence of the First Order. We follow the travails of a lone gunfighter in the outer reaches of the galaxy far from the...
The Mandalorian is set after the fall of the Empire and before the emergence of the First Order. We follow the travails of a lone gunfighter in the outer reaches of the galaxy far from the authority of the New Republic.
Previous:
11 votes -
How Lucasfilm’s new “stagecraft” tech brought ‘The Mandalorian’ to life and may change the future of TV
9 votes -
Avenue 5 | Official teaser
6 votes -
The Expanse | Season 4 official trailer
10 votes -
The Mandalorian | Official trailer 2
6 votes -
Lee Pace, Jared Harris to star in Apple’s Isaac Asimov series ‘Foundation’
11 votes -
Star Trek: Picard | NYCC trailer
13 votes -
‘Battlestar Galactica’ reboot from Sam Esmail in the works for NBCU's Peacock streaming service
12 votes -
The Mandalorian | Official trailer
8 votes -
The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy TV series in the works at Hulu from Carlton Cuse & Jason Fuchs
16 votes -
‘The Expanse’ renewed for season five at Amazon
15 votes -
Star Trek: Picard | San Diego Comic-Con (SDCC) trailer
12 votes -
You should watch Years and Years
Years and Years is a British political near-future soft SF programme. Being British it's one short series - 6 episodes, 1 hour per episode. Mainstream broadcast SF isn't going to push all the...
Years and Years is a British political near-future soft SF programme. Being British it's one short series - 6 episodes, 1 hour per episode. Mainstream broadcast SF isn't going to push all the boundaries, but this has some neat ideas. The political stuff feels realistic enough to work.
Emma Thompson is always impressive and she does excellent work here as a populist, fascist, politician. Jessica Hynes plays Edith with suitable intensity.
Here are a bunch of links:
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt8694364/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1
[spoilers] https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/review/years-and-years-1220415
[spoilers] https://variety.com/2019/tv/reviews/years-and-years-review-emma-thompson-hbo-1203243714/
17 votes -
Star Trek: Picard first poster
@sirpatstew: Picard. #StarTrekPicard #StarTrek
9 votes -
Star Trek Discovery Season 2 | re:View
5 votes -
Who actually ruined the Borg?
9 votes -
A ranking of every ‘Black Mirror’ episode
8 votes -
Star Trek fans: what's your position on the amount of technological mumbo jumbo?
I'm (re)watching Star Trek: The Next Generation, and after a few episodes I started to tune out every time they detail how some specific solution is possible. There's little care with consistency,...
I'm (re)watching Star Trek: The Next Generation, and after a few episodes I started to tune out every time they detail how some specific solution is possible. There's little care with consistency, everything is bent to fit the story. "Oh, I get it, if I reverse the trusters and focus the beams using a microwaved non-Euclidian logarithmic abstraction, we can get the shields back and fix the time distillation!".
I know Star Trek is soft sci-fi, but come on! If it's all meaningless, at least keep it to a minimum. Focus on the interesting bits: the politics, the culture, the philosophical exploration, the juicy paradoxes.
I still love Star Trek and I definitely don't want it to become hard sci-fi, but sometimes it feels like /r/VXJunkies/...
9 votes -
I don't get all the love for The Orville
Spoilers for all seasons of both The Orville and Star Trek: Discovery. The Orville isn't bad, but it's not the worthy successor to pre-Abrams Star Trek that a lot of people on /r/startrek—and...
Spoilers for all seasons of both The Orville and Star Trek: Discovery.
The Orville isn't bad, but it's not the worthy successor to pre-Abrams Star Trek that a lot of people on /r/startrek—and increasingly on /r/DaystromInstitute—make it out to be, and honestly I struggle to understand how people are even reaching that conclusion.
I should start, I suppose, with what I like about this show. First, I like the characters—with two exceptions, I'll get to that later. Dr. Finn, in particular, is a delight: Penny Johnson Jerald is a very talented actress and it's really great to see her in a role where the rest of the cast draws on her character's wisdom. She plays it well. The rest of the bridge crew is great, too: Gordon, LaMarr, and Bortas are all lots of fun, and Jessica Szohr is a great addition for season 2: Halston Sage didn't quite have the skill to pull her character off.
The show looks great. Union vessels are distinct from Federation vessels and they're not just ISO Human Standard Spaceships either, which is commendable. Kaylon spheres are neat play on Borg cubes, and my only real complaint in this regard is that Moclan and Krill vessels look oddly similar. The engine effects, the depiction of celestial objects, the overall Union aesthetic, it's all very pleasing to the eye.
The worldbuilding is great. This is the one place that I think I would even go as far to say The Orville has a clear edge over Star Trek. Trek has built up loads of cruft over the years and sometimes struggles to keep it all together. For example, The Orville has swept away the inconsistent depiction of enlisted personnel that Trek fouls up seemingly very chance it gets by just depicting officers, which makes sense for a highly automated vessel. I fundamentally "buy" the Planetary Union as a human-centric interstellar polity in the same way I buy the UFP. (My one complaint in this department is that there does not appear to be any bureaucratic distinction between the Union government and the Union fleet, i.e. it lacks the distinction between The Federation and Starfleet. That seems like an oddity I hope they correct in season 3.) McFarlane is a nerd, he's fastidious about detail, and you just know he's has to have pages upon pages of worldbuilding details which helps him keep it consistent. It shows.
But the show falls flat on its face in two key ways which, unfortunately, appear to be baked into the concept.
Shortfall one: I just can't seem to warm up to either Mercer or Grayson, which for obvious reasons is a huge problem, because the show is now on record as indicating that their romantic relationship is The Key To Saving The Galaxy™. The Orville is an episodic throwback, but if it has a "main arc," that main arc is Ed & Kelly's relationship, and it just feels awkward and out of place.
I don't really dislike Grayson, but I can't find anything to really like about her either. She's just kinda there, and her story never diverges from Mercer's. Which brings me to Mercer... which... just... ugh. Never in my life have I seen a more egregious case of a show creator playing out his fantasy on camera. I cannot tell you the number of times I've seen someone make a statement which boils down to "I don't like Discovery because Burnham is a Mary Sue, and that's why I prefer The Orville" as if Mercer is not the most blatant case of a Marty Stu to ever grace network television and get renewed for a second season. I mean, come on. He's the perfect captain, he always makes the right call, yet for some reason the show keeps trying to sell us on the notion that he's damaged goods and out-of-favor with the Admiralty. It's not believable, and it irks me endlessly that anyone would lob this criticism at Discovery when The Orville is an order of magnitude more guilty of this conceit.
And that brings me to the elephant in the room: the direct Star Trek comparison. I seem to recall Season 1 having a novel episode here and there, even if they were snoozefests. Season 1 also bothered to draw from other sources of inspiration, even if those sources were Trek-adjacent shows like Black Mirror and The Twilight Zone. But on the other hand, some episodes from season 1 were straight rips from old Trek. "If the Stars Should Appear"? Straight remake of "For the World is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky." "Mad Idolatry"? Straight remake of "Blink of an Eye."
And Season 2? Season 2 doubled down on the Trek remake approach. No other sources, no novel concepts: almost every episode is a remake of a previous episode of Star Trek. Sometimes The Orville at least bothered to remix a pair of episodes, and sometimes a lot of the details got changed, but with one exception, every episode was a Trek episode remake.
Orville Ep Trek Ep(s) "Ja'loja" This is the only original one "Primal Urges" "Hollow Pursuits" and/or "Extreme Risk" "Home" "Home" "Nothing Left on Earth Excepting Fishes" "The Wolf Inside" (Ash Tyler's arc in general) "All the World Is Birthday Cake" "Who Watches the Watchers" mixed with "First Contact" "A Happy Refrain" "In Theory" "Deflectors" "A Man Alone" and/or "Suspicions" "Identity" (both parts) "The Best of Both Worlds" mixed with "Prototype" "Blood of Patriots" "The Wounded" "Lasting Impressions" "Booby Trap" and/or "It's Only a Paper Moon" "Sanctuary" "The Outcast" "Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow" "Second Chances" "The Road Not Taken" "Timeless" The degree to which a given The Orville episode is a remake of the Trek episode I've listed varies. "Home" is only similar if you look at the broad strokes: the officer on loan from the scientifically advanced Earth ally goes home where her family disparages her for spending all that time with humans. The home invasion plot from that episode was original, but it was also kinda weird and contrived. The flipside of this constant borrowing from Trek is that when The Orville does go off the beaten path, it's inevitably flat out boring. "Ja'loja" was an utterly forgettable episode because it largely focused on Ed & Kelly relationship drama.
And even if we look at "Ja'loja," there's a bit of "Amok Time" in there with the whole "returning to the desert homeworld" for the Moclan urination ceremony. Sometimes it's bits and pieces into a blender, but other times it's a basically a straight rip, like it is with "All the World Is Birthday Cake" and "Blood of Patriots." Perhaps the most blatant "homage" was introducing a surgically altered
KlingonKrill to infiltrate the hero ship, right down to the name and rank of the infiltrator!I know, everything's a remix, and I know, it's a fine line between "ripoff" and "homage," but the problem with this level of "borrowing" is that when you've seen every episode of Star Trek as many times as I have, each episode of The Orville just becomes an exercise in "I wonder which Star Trek episode this will be," and once you figure it out, it just saps all the urgency and tension out of the viewing experience. It gets boring.
I didn't get bored with Discovery. I mean, sure, Discovery has its problems. In many ways its problems are the inverse of The Orville's strengths: I struggle to care all that much about any of the characters, the show is rife with dark sets and quick shots which just isn't that visually appealing, and the worldbuilding is at times really difficult to reconcile with established Trek lore. (The Spore drive is classified? That's why we never see it again? Ummm... OK, then.) And the story, while chaotic and poorly paced & planned due to constant showrunner turmoil, is at the very least interesting and novel.
The perfect Star Trek would be a synthesis of these two shows, but apart, each show pretty much breaks even when you take the strengths and weaknesses on the merits. Which brings me to my title: I cannot for the life of me get into the mindset of the fans who see this as the True Trek of our time. It's just remakes of old Trek, and while the visuals have been updated for 2019, the stories have not.
The bottom line is that while it's great that we have two Trek-style shows on the air at the same time for the first time since the 90's, neither show is great, or even good. They're both just OK, and the huge disparity between how they've been received doesn't make much sense to me.
24 votes