Star Trek is full of stuff that's absurd though. This a show where nearly every intelligent species in the galaxy looks nearly identical to humans except for a few brow ridges or pointy ears. The Tuvix stuff is just one more ridiculous thing in a sea of ridiculosity. I thought the Tuvix episode was one of the best Voyager episodes.
wasn't there some sort of AIDS episode that was fairly controversial?
no, there was some vulcan mind sex thing where they all gave each other a disease.
no, there was some vulcan mind sex thing where they all gave each other a disease.
The Tuvix episode of Voyager is probably the most controversial for me, but yes DS9 was an amazing show and Pale Moonlight is one of its most entertaining hours.
Still though, they merge Tuvok and Neelix and create a better character than either had been and ever became...then outright murder him so Janeway can have her buddy back.
They watch a good man, a friend plead for his life and still execute him. Fuck you Janeway!
I just realized how Janeway could've fixed the Tuvix problem without murder.
Make an illegal transport-copy of Tuvix. Keep both inside the computer. Use the copy to restore Tuvok and Neelix. Then just have the transporter spit out all three of them. If the two copies of Tuvix are just data in a computer and aren't allowed to differentiate, then you simply made and used a copy of information, and nobody died.
Star Trek is full of stuff that's absurd though. This a show where nearly every intelligent species in the galaxy looks nearly identical to humans except for a few brow ridges or pointy ears. The Tuvix stuff is just one more ridiculous thing in a sea of ridiculosity. I thought the Tuvix episode was one of the best Voyager episodes.
This thread reminded me I never watched the last season of DS9. I really hated the religious emissary stuff. The spirits battling in the station was a serious jumping the shark moment. I should at least finish it though.
They're just non corporeal aliens, no different than Q. The Bajorans are the only ones who see them as gods.
The Dominion War is still the best arc of any Trek, especially since they built it up across the entire series. They first name dropped the Dominion in season 1, and gradually ramped up their involvement in the show from there.
That was "explained" by TNG ep "The Chase", where it was revealed that the first race to develop in the galaxy billions of years ago searched for millenia for other intelligent life and found none, so seeded thousand of worlds with their own DNA mix, so all humanoid life is related.
A pretty mind-blowing, religion-shattering, galactic-civilisation uniting, revelation that was forgot about when the credits rolled.
They explained that in TNG. The first sentient race in the galaxy seeded planets with life when they found out they were the only life in the galaxy. They designed the DNA of their seeding microbes in such a way that they would lead to similar sentient beings evolving on many worlds, with the hope that they would join together as one big happy family because of looking alike.
Just make a transporter copy of everyone on the ship and keep them inside the computer. Then if anyone dies, just transporter out a copy of them.
Better then Hercules in space, well until the space vampires showed up.oh god, that show...
Star Trek is full of stuff that's absurd though. This a show where nearly every intelligent species in the galaxy looks nearly identical to humans except for a few brow ridges or pointy ears. The Tuvix stuff is just one more ridiculous thing in a sea of ridiculosity. I thought the Tuvix episode was one of the best Voyager episodes.
Quark: What do you think?
Garak: It's vile.
Quark: I know. It's so bubbly and cloying and happy.
Garak: Just like the Federation.
Quark: And you know what's really frightening? If you drink enough of it, you begin to like it.
Garak: It's insidious.
Quark: Just like the Federation.
This is the eye-rollingest eye-rolly dialog to come out of DS9, and that's saying something. It's like they borrowed Lucas' ham gloves.
I hate living in a world without Star Trek on air.
Coincidentally, the idyllic vision of humanity is the reason why I can't stand most Star Trekhaving just recently gotten back into finishing my watch-through of TNG (for the whatever'th time) i was contemplating giving DS9 another shot having never made it past halfway into the first season.
OP has convinced me not to watch it. i have a huge problem with shattering the idyllic vision of humanity as seen in TNG. if i wanted to watch humans be despicable and treacherous in space i'll watch battlestar.
After Voyager, Enterprise, and the last two TNG movies, it needed a break.
Its you thats missing out on the best that Star Trek has to offer.having just recently gotten back into finishing my watch-through of TNG (for the whatever'th time) i was contemplating giving DS9 another shot having never made it past halfway into the first season.
OP has convinced me not to watch it. i have a huge problem with shattering the idyllic vision of humanity as seen in TNG. if i wanted to watch humans be despicable and treacherous in space i'll watch battlestar.
Coincidentally, the idyllic vision of humanity is the reason why I can't stand most Star Trek
It didn't really need a break, it just needed new blood and quality people at the helm. Rick Berman overstayed his welcome.
The last season of Enterprise was great. Best Trek since DS9 went off the air. And it was basically because they put someone who gave a shit on top of the show. Same goes for the new Star Trek film.
I'm surprised there hasn't really been any talks of a new Star Trek series. Abrams' Trek was such a huge hit, it seems like a TV show would be a huge get.
I enjoyed the last series of Enterprise until it got to the finale.
It was so awful. It had the Spiderman 3 effect of making everything that came before it turn to complete shit.
What I've always thought would work would to take a Star Wars Legacy route and have it take place 100-200 years after Voyager. It'd give you enough wiggle room to avoid contradicting either timeline.Audiences get confused or something. Like how they didn't want a Batman to show up on Smallville or have his own show because of Chris Nolan's film Batman being in theaters.
*shrug*
You mean The Next Generation route?What I've always thought would work would to take a Star Wars Legacy route and have it take place 100-200 years after Voyager. It'd give you enough wiggle room to avoid contradicting either timeline.
You mean The Next Generation route?
That was Roddenberry's directive. Humanity had evolved to the point they wouldn't have any disagreements!Yeah, having everyone love each other is a lofty ideal but it makes for TERRIBLE drama. You can still have a utopian society and still have people disagree with each other. I guess thats what made DS9 so fresh. Its made quite clear when Sisko and Kira meet that she has no love for the Federation and she doesn't want them there. They work together because they have to but Kira, on several occasions, does what she thinks is best for Bajor and not what Sisko wanted.
That was Roddenberry's directive. Humanity had evolved to the point they wouldn't have any disagreements!
DS9 added all the alien cast just to get around that and allow conflict.
Yeah, the actual line got a chuckle from me. I thought it was a dream sequence for a few moments, it was that bad.Your posting of Vreenak's face made me want to go watch the scene, and I found this which I thought was great:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BwbPRCRkMy0
What exactly was wrong with Enterprise? I loved everything about it, including the theme tune.
Well, they also changed some things for no apparent reasons. Like making the Vulcans complete dicks.
The reason why Star Trek was even allowed to deteriorate into that condition was because of over-saturation: successful series such as Star Trek that go on for too long eventually become too self-referential, unimaginative, and reliant upon the ideas and people with whom they became successful in the first place. You rarely have this problem if a series or franchises ends (or at least takes a break) while it's on top. But series rarely go out on top, particularly in sci-fi, because fans always want to learn more about the mythology and universe. The producers stick with the formula long after they've driven it into the ground. Eventually it becomes tiresome. Was Paramount really going to force Berman off of Star Trek after he had made so much money for them? I doubt it.It didn't really need a break, it just needed new blood and quality people at the helm. Rick Berman overstayed his welcome.
The last season of Enterprise was great. Best Trek since DS9 went off the air. And it was basically because they put someone who gave a shit on top of the show. Same goes for the new Star Trek film.
The reason why Star Trek was even allowed to deteriorate into that condition was because of over-saturation: successful series such as Star Trek that go on for too long eventually become too self-referential, unimaginative, and reliant upon the ideas and people with whom they became successful in the first place. You rarely have this problem if a series or franchises ends (or at least takes a break) while it's on top. But series rarely go out on top, particularly in sci-fi, because fans always want to learn more about the mythology and universe. The producers stick with the formula long after they've driven it into the ground. Eventually it becomes tiresome. Was Paramount really going to force Berman off of Star Trek after he had made so much money for them? I doubt it.
Anyway, I don't think that the last season of Enterprise is quite as bad as the worst of TNG or DS9, but it still feels like a disappointment to me given the events that it's trying to depict. Far too much of it feels like nothing more than fanfiction - which, I suppose, is an accurate assessment, since they allowed glorified fanfiction writers to contribute to the screenplays. Fanfiction writers always try to explain elements of the mythology in fan-pleasing ways, but it often comes across as absurd.
sfdebris does damn good reviews... except for the first version of his Wrath of Khan review, way too much Moby Dick reading.