The show clearly shows Murderbot as being ACE and uncomfortable with the sexual and gendered reactions of others towards them — which is as important in my view the outward and physical apparent gender.
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StillPaisleyCat@startrek.websiteto Star Trek Social Club@startrek.website•Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Producers Have A Genius Plan To Keep The Show Alive (Kind Of)English7·2 days agoI have started (another) rewatch of TAS recently.
This time, what’s struck me is how much the Kirk in TAS aligns with Paul Wesley’s performance.
Despite TAS being animated to look like Shatner’s Kirk and Shatner voicing the part, somehow there’s less swagger and a more intellectual Kirk in TAS.
It’s in the writing surely but perhaps the creators had a sense that they needed to shift the tone to sell the drama on an animated show — especially one that took advantage of the medium to show even more trippy aliens and phenomena.
I wasn’t looking for it but there it is.
StillPaisleyCat@startrek.websiteto Star Trek Social Club@startrek.website•Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Producers Have A Genius Plan To Keep The Show Alive (Kind Of)English6·3 days agoThe Animated Series that ran in the mid 70s although it was originally just called ‘Star Trek.’
It had the same cast as TOS. Roddenberry was the showrunner again (after leaving before season 3 of TOS) and DC Fontana was the Supervising Editor in charge of the scripts.
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Star_Trek:_The_Animated_Series
StillPaisleyCat@startrek.websiteto Star Trek Social Club@startrek.website•Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Producers Have A Genius Plan To Keep The Show Alive (Kind Of)English6·4 days agoAt 22 episodes total, and only 6 in TAS second season, it could go either way.
I am willing to concede so that those who don’t love TAS much as I do can get their proper closure to the 5 year mission.
And then there’s part of me that very much wants Vanguard to be the new, darker station-based serialized ensemble show to fill the DS9 niche we haven’t quite had in this era.
StillPaisleyCat@startrek.websiteto Star Trek Social Club@startrek.website•Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Producers Have A Genius Plan To Keep The Show Alive (Kind Of)English8·4 days agoTAS is the 4th season of TOS - with some of the scripts adapted from the prep for a live-action TOS season 4 that never happened. (Yes, TAS IS canon!)
Now, we know that Arex and M’Ress are difficult to bring to live action, but who’s to say that their rotations on Enterprise aren’t done, and Chekov isn’t back, as year 5 begins?
StillPaisleyCat@startrek.websiteto Star Trek Social Club@startrek.website•SNW Season 3 Early Review Round-UpEnglish2·4 days agoIndiewire has a less positive review - “Brings the Fun — and Zombies — but Misses Chances to Go Deeper”
https://www.indiewire.com/criticism/shows/star-trek-strange-new-worlds-season-3-review-1235132207/
As I share this reviewer’s opinion on Tomorrow-cubed, I think I’m at the point of wanting to stop myself from reading more reviews now…
StillPaisleyCat@startrek.websiteto Star Trek Social Club@startrek.website•SNW Season 3 Early Review Round-UpEnglish4·5 days agoI’ve been wondering how much of the decision to wrap SNW with a short sixth season might have to do with Goldsman’s contract with Paramount coming to an end and his new one with another franchise and major studio.
SNW really was his project, regardless of Alonso Myers being the co-showrunner.
There’s a possibility that this is also about a change in leadership as the show transitions to a true TOS show, perhaps hopping to a time post-TAS but before the movies, and even shifting somewhat in tone.
All of this would make sense of casting an older actor as Jim Kirk.
StillPaisleyCat@startrek.websiteto Star Trek Social Club@startrek.website•SNW Season 3 Early Review Round-UpEnglish5·5 days agoRyan Britt had a good review for Inverse, and an interesting take on the show overall.
It’s tempting to say that SNW succeeds because, of all the newer Trek shows, it’s the one that feels the most like fan fiction. Or perhaps, to put it another way, it’s Star Trek version of Marvel’s What If? In this case, the “What If?” scenario that is floated in nearly every episode is “What if the 60s Star Trek show were made today?”
Given how much of a OG fan Akiva Goldsman is, this seems a fair assessment - even if other, mostly younger fans, have different ideas about where the show should link up with the original.
https://www.inverse.com/entertainment/star-trek-strange-new-worlds-season-3-review
StillPaisleyCat@startrek.websiteto Star Trek Social Club@startrek.website•Paramount+ Announces Fifth and Final Season of Star Trek: Strange New WorldsEnglish3·7 days agoI was hoping that SNW would focus on Pike and his crew and less on the legacy characters.
But it seems Goldsman has had his ideas about it since the early 1970s and he’s fulfilling his fan dreams, as an EP and writer, of filling in the backstories of the characters he and we love. I can’t naysay that and it certainly sold the suits on 5 seasons of an excellent show.
StillPaisleyCat@startrek.websiteto Star Trek Social Club@startrek.website•Paramount+ Announces Fifth and Final Season of Star Trek: Strange New WorldsEnglish11·8 days agoWe have to keep in mind that we’ve only seen 20 of 46 episodes, less than half the full run.
I believe that the new benchmark for selling a licence for reruns on other streamers and linear has dropped from over 70 episodes to a bit over 40 based on various industry reports. So this definitely puts SNW above that threshold.
This does raise the question though whether there is a plan to morph this into some kind of TOS continuation past year 5 and TAS.
StillPaisleyCat@startrek.websiteto Star Trek Social Club@startrek.website•Paramount+ Announces Fifth and Final Season of Star Trek: Strange New WorldsEnglish23·8 days agoSo a half season + a one-hour series finale?
Having only 5 seasons seems the new normal since they haven’t been able to actually produce one season per calendar year and actors’ contracts run 7 years.
But having a short season seems weird, like some kind of negotiated compromise.
This is just going to feed the ‘Kurtzman is done when his contract expires …’ speculation.
StillPaisleyCat@startrek.websiteto Star Trek Social Club@startrek.website•EXO-6 Revisits "The Cage," Master Replicas' Next Action Figures (and a Talking Moopsy!), and Much More Star Trek Merch News!English2·9 days agoNow I wish I had preordered Spock.
The one I want most is Number One but it would have been great to have the set.
StillPaisleyCat@startrek.websiteto Star Trek Social Club@startrek.website•Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Reveals Season 3 PostersEnglish2·14 days agoShould we start a pool?
StillPaisleyCat@startrek.websiteto Star Trek Social Club@startrek.website•Bruce Horak On Catching That Carrot On ‘Star Trek: Strange New Worlds’ And Painting Over 600 PortraitsEnglish6·21 days agoOne of the things in the interview, that’s super interesting, is that the original script had a scene that would have made it absolutely unequivocal that Hemmer was killed.
And it was shot, with some significant Sfx challenges.
The interviewers asked Bruce if there were any scenes left in the cutting room floor and he responded that there was.
:::The actor was in harness for a falling scene in which he would have been fighting off young Gorn. He had been pleased to have the opportunity to have a heroic on-screen:::
But the scene was cut despite it being challenging production-wise, all the more so with a blind actor in prosthetics.
So, one has to wonder if the showrunners decided to keep the door open for Hemmer to return…
StillPaisleyCat@startrek.websiteto Star Trek Social Club@startrek.website•New Star Trek Series In-DevelopmentEnglish6·1 month agoMy reaction precisely.
But who knows, it may be wonderful.
And I’m always ready to champion more animated Trek.
StillPaisleyCat@startrek.websiteto Star Trek Social Club@startrek.website•Interview: Tawny Newsome On Finding The Sweet Spot For Her Star Trek Workplace ComedyEnglish5·1 month agoI don’t think you needed [sic], just the comma that StarTrek.com omitted.
So, this is a big reveal - the scenario is a planet that has not been but now is a part of the Federation.
The viewpoint is civilian.
The resort workplace setting, like the old Loveboat or Fantasy Island, means that anyone can come by as the guest star.
StillPaisleyCat@startrek.websiteto Star Trek Social Club@startrek.website•P+ SpongeBob crossover adEnglish4·2 months agoThe production values are sufficiently high that it makes me think it might actually be from an episode to come.
StillPaisleyCat@startrek.websiteto Star Trek Social Club@startrek.website•Fanhome Reveals Next Star Trek Starship Models, Including the USS Dauntless from Star Trek: ProdigyEnglish1·4 months agoDid I miss the actual Protostar announcement?
StillPaisleyCat@startrek.websiteto Star Trek Social Club@startrek.website•Worst examples of TreknobabbleEnglish1·9 months agoThe thing is that while the technobabble is just that, the process represents how engineering gets done better than most other ‘serious’ SF, albeit at compressed speed.
Voyager did a better job than any at showing how the thinking and problem-solving work gets done - which to me is more the point.
All this criticism seems to come from folks who’ve never seen nerds working in teams being nerds. They seem to want science FICTION to be locked down to concepts that someone with a mid 20th bachelor’s degree in science would know.
Whereas the real life scientists and engineers in my circle react more like Erin Macdonald did when she was working on her physics PhD and saw Voyager. She recognized the process and thought it was cool that some of the newer concepts in gravimetrics were referenced but didn’t sweat the small stuff.
I’m rather interested to see where they go with Korby.
It’s important for Christine Chapel’s character that the backstory they are developing for the TOS relationship is credible.
It was really rather sad and mortifying for Chapel in TOS to be shown as a intelligent and successful scientist, who took a Starfleet starship posting as a nurse to track down a missing fiance only to have him revealed as a dark mastermind turning people into androids.
Having what appeared to be a one sided, unrequited longing for Spock as well, made Chapel come across as pathetic, and very much shifted it to misogyny. Or, at least a complete failure of a Bechtel-type test where a female character exists for more than her interest in male characters.
(Even Majel Barrett’s Number One in ‘The Cage’ was put in an unrequited attraction situation with Pike.)