Posted on 09/29/2017 10:37:47 AM PDT by Bender2
The Orville Episode 4 Review: If the Stars Should Appear
The Orville runs into a massive ship adrift in space, and the story, although familiar in some ways, unfolds impressively.
[This "The Orville" review contains spoilers]
The Orville Season 1 Episode 4
Youd think that after many seasons and spinoffs of Star Trek, wed have seen an episode like this one, but The Orville is proving that it can break new ground even as it treads familiar territory. Encountering a society blinded by self-imposed ignorance is nothing new, of course, but the manner in which this show presents its encounters with other civilizations is quickly beginning to become its own thing. Although the pacing had its issues this week, the overall story and the continuing development of characters weve come to enjoy left us satisfied.
(Excerpt) Read more at denofgeek.com ...
Read my post #12
The reason why is simply because Orville airs on a regular television network and is readily available, whereas Discovery is available "exclusively through CBS All Access online streaming, only $5.99 per month ($9.99 if you don't watch commercials every five minutes), have your credit card ready NOW!!", and I refuse to pay that game with the greedy Ferengis at CBS. There are other ways to see Discovery, and I will eventually check out episodes 2-3, but I'm no rush to do so, given how lukewarm I felt about the first episode.
I've already posted a detailed analysis of Discovery's pilot.
As for Orville, I think it earned its place as a worthy successor of Star Trek with the third episode. MacFarlane GETS Star Trek much more than the SJWs at CBS, even though MacFarlane is a liberal too. Star Trek never had to TELL the audience it was "diverse", it let the characters speak for themselves, and it addressed current hot button political issues through the lens of science fiction, raised some interesting points about them, and sparked thoughtful debate from the audience. That's pretty much exactly what Orville did in episode 3 (touched on the transgender debate, foreign cultures altering babies at birth without their consent, woman's rights, etc., etc. in a lighthearted and fun way). Orville might have even "made history" by having the first "same sex couple" on TV that is NOT gay, and I think deliberately made it that way by having Bortus be the most straight-laced guy there is in the cast (I could just imagine Bortus visiting earth some day, being invited to a gay bar because he has a male mate, and storming away shocked and baffled by "gay culture" among humans ("which of you will lay the egg??"), since the concept of "gay" pretty much doesn't even exist on his planet)
Some liberals are actually trashing MacFarlane for the third episode, yapping about a "cis-gendered straight white male has no business making silly jokes about this serious issue that is emotionally distressful to many transright activists" blah blah blah. I love it when liberals eat their own.
We live in very odd times, when a parody of Star Trek is more Star Trek than the "official" Star Trek program.
Couldnt even get through the first episode of this series.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.