Posted on 02/18/2018 6:58:09 PM PST by EveningStar
Star Trek: Discovery has staked a lot on the idea that it was telling a different kind of Star Trek story a tighter, more plotted-out version of Trek instead of the crisis-of-the-week style of earlier shows, which were designed to meet the needs of cable syndication. But Discovery which just wrapped up its first season on Sunday didnt embrace long-arc storytelling. The creators and writers divided the season and its story into disparate pieces, and crammed them so full of flashy plot twists and reveals that the series rarely reached beyond hammering home its core conceit: that war is bad, and morals are good.
And boy, does Discovery want its fans to feel the weight of that motto. The shows cycling plotlines looped from the pilot (almost unrelated to the larger story), to the nearly standalone middle episodes, to the larger Klingon war arc, the Mirror Universe detour, and then the slightly different second Klingon war plot. And throughout, the writers room seemed willing to try any tactic to get that central point across. But by shattering the season into fragments of stories, Discovery ended up with characters who barely changed over 15 episodes. They spent the whole season going through the same motions in whatever Mad Libs scenario a given episode required.
(Excerpt) Read more at theverge.com ...
Compared to what followed him, Peter Davison was alright, but Tom Baker was they guy who brought in so much of the levity.
Interesting bit of trivia:
Yes, it was. Didn't know that.
I did too.
Batteries not included!
spore-drive.......!
Scotty would be appalled.
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