How Authentic a Trek Show is This?

  • This feels like the real deal!

    Votes: 1 10.0%
  • Have these guys even watched the original series?

    Votes: 9 90.0%
  • I'm still on the fence

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    10

Doctor Omega

Member: Rank 10
Wait a minute though.... Thinking on it, this means......

..... that Starfleet will now discover the Mirror Universe ten years or so before it was originally discovered by Captain Kirk and co.

Maybe they should hire someone to actually care about continuity? At least, just a little? :emoji_confused:
 

Doctor Omega

Member: Rank 10
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With the first episode......

What did you think of it?


THE VULCAN HELLO

The Vulcan Hello is the debut episode of Star Trek: Discovery, which will air on CBS, September 24, 2017.

It is the only episode slated to air on standard broadcast television, with the follow-up episode "Battle at the Binary Stars" debuting on the CBS All Accessstreaming service immediately following the premiere.

Star Trek: Discovery
continues the space science fiction franchise Star Trek, with this series serving as a prequel that shows a war between the Starfleet from Earth and the Klingon Empire.


The crew of the USS Shenzhou discovers an unidentified object while on patrol, leading First Officer Michael Burnham to investigate





On to the next episode.....

BATTLE AT THE BINARY STARS


https://www.imdforums.com/threads/battle-at-the-binary-stars-s1-ep-2.3381/
 
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Doctor Omega

Member: Rank 10
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Gavin

Member: Rank 6
VIP
I'm going to give it a chance. I was delighted to see that it's going to be available on Netflix here in Australia. I had thought I'd have to pirate it to see it. Of course it will have to fit in with the other shows I'm currently watching (Daredevil, Game of Thrones, ST: TNG, Enterprise, Dirk Gently) and those I'm yet to start (The Orville, Defenders).
 

Doctor Omega

Member: Rank 10
Star Trek: Discovery EP Asks for Patience with Continuity Changes


In an interview with CBR ahead of the series’ debut, co-showrunner and executive producer Aaron Harberts explained why fans should be patient with the brand-new Trek show.

Asked whether the series will address these crafty deviations from the main continuity, Harberts responded, “Absolutely. I wish we could watch it with them on the couch. When something looks like it is wildly divergent from what people know to be canon, I always want to say, ‘Hold on a second! Just wait — we know,’” the EP said.

He added, “Nine times out of 10, we know that we’re violating canon. We also know that two or three episodes later, we’re going to turn it. If people are patient, and sort of don’t have a knee-jerk reaction to what they’re seeing, the delight has been resolving it, tying it up, showing everybody that we’re in on it.”


So, even if Discovery does seem to change things you know and love from the world of Star Trek, you should keep watching as it may not be it as first appears.

The writers and producers on the show think it adds something to the series. “That’s something that we really are excited about in terms of the storytelling,” Harberts continued, “So maybe the fans go a little bit crazy on the couch for a second, but either an act later, a scene later, or two episodes later, we hope that they’ll say, ‘Oh, I get it. I get what they were doing. Oh, they didn’t violate it. They weren’t wrong. They called it out and we move on.'”
 

Doctor Omega

Member: Rank 10
Star Trek: Discovery Will Push Boundaries, Drop F-Bombs When Necessary

The co-showrunner then detailed an exact instance in the series where characters casually drop the f-bomb — in this case, used to punctuate a comedic moment. “We have a moment where three of our scientists have just pulled off the most incredible thing ever,” Harberts teased. “They are talking about concepts that are so above everybody else’s head, and one of them says, “This is so fucking cool.” And she’s a cadet, and she’s catches herself, and she looks at her boss, because oh my God, she just dropped an F-bomb. And her boss, played by Anthony Rapp, turns to her and says, “You’re right, cadet — this is fucking cool.” So in a moment like that, where I feel like we’re celebrating smarts and people who are at the top of their game. It’s rare when we’ll do it, but if we do it, we want to make it feel organic.”
 

Doctor Omega

Member: Rank 10
Asked whether the series will address these crafty deviations from the main continuity, Harberts responded, “Absolutely. I wish we could watch it with them on the couch. When something looks like it is wildly divergent from what people know to be canon, I always want to say, ‘Hold on a second! Just wait — we know,’” the EP said.
I wonder if these explanations for the abandoned continuity were always planned. Or could it be that they are being added in now that the studio has become aware of disgruntlement and a possible backlash?
 

Gavin

Member: Rank 6
VIP
Just watched the first episode and I'm enjoying it so far. It looks and feels reasonably Star Trek as long as one doesn't try to think too hard about continuity. Hopefully some of those continuity issues will be addressed as we've been promised but overall I'm willing to give it a chance. Will definitely be watching more.
 

Doctor Omega

Member: Rank 10
“Star Trek Discovery” S2 Not Until 2019?


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With the first two episodes of “Star Trek: Discovery” having aired on Sunday night, the producers have talked about the show moving forward with next week’s third episode something of a ‘new pilot’ in the wake of the more self-contained two-episode premiere and a small a time jump between the second and third episodes.

Talk has also turned towards the second season and when it would air, something they’re more conservative about discussing following this first season undergoing numerous delays. Pressed to predict a date, producer Alex Kurtzman tells THR:

“Ideally, on the early side of 2019… There have been preliminary conversations about when and how [a second season could air] and we’ve been very consistent in our message, which is that rather than announce a date and have to push again, let’s take into consideration everything we’ve learned from this season.

Now we know what we can do and where the sand traps are, so let’s give ourselves ample time to announce a date that makes sense to everybody – both the needs of production and CBS. Breaking story is, in some ways, the easier and faster thing; it’s the ability to execute on it that’s much harder. We want to take the right amount of time and don’t want to rush.”

In terms of the production of the first season, Kurtzman confirms that filming on the finale is about to begin with the fourteenth episode about to wrap and the fifteenth and sixteenth about to begin shooting.

Post-production is underway on the other episodes in between with only the first four fully complete at this time. The fifth episode will undergo mixing this week.

“Star Trek: Discovery” airs Sunday nights on CBS All Access in the United States and Mondays in most other countries around the world.
 

Doctor Omega

Member: Rank 10
Have seen both parts now.

To be honest, I don't like it.

Explosions! Arguing! A Mary Sue character who is brighter than all the others, knows the answers and seems to be the only successfully pro-active character. Anyone else who tries to be heroic gets killed.

The whole season is going to be about war.

No planet of the week. No variety.

The new Klingons might as well be another species and could have been if it had been set post Nemesis, which would have allowed for loads of lovely Berman era guest cameos too.

Yes, it is entertaining enough telly, with the whizz-bangs and lens flares. But I also think that it will be forgettable telly. Entertaining while you watch it, but, like a McDonalds, ultimately unsatisfying.

There is also a negativity underlying it all that seems to me to miss the central ethos of the whole point of Star Trek.

I would loved to have been aboard the U.S.S. Enterprise of the Kirk or Picard era.

I would hate to be stuck on any of these new ships, with the added unpleasantness that I could die horribly as the entire ship explodes around me in as dramatic and horrible way as possible, as I hurtle flip flopping into the awful vacuum of space!

No escapism or hope of a brighter future here, I am sad to see.

A dissapointment i.m.o.
 

Doctor Omega

Member: Rank 10
I think there is a definite J.J.Abrams influence on this show. Lens flares in particular.

I just wish there was more of a Classic Trek influence on the show. :emoji_confused:
 
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Doctor Omega

Member: Rank 10
Kirshner To Play Spock’s Mom On “Discovery”


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Canadian actress Mia Kirshner (“24,” “The L Word”) has scored the role of Amanda Grayson, Sarek’s human wife, in the first season of CBS All Access’ “Star Trek: Discovery”.

Executive producers and showrunners Aaron Harberts and Gretchen J. Berg revealed the news to TrekMovie at the Hollywood blue carpet premiere earlier this week, Kirshner following in the footsteps of Jane Wyatt and Winona Ryder who previously played the role.

Herberts also talked about canon, saying the events we see will all fit into the prime timeline:

“In terms of canon, we want to make sure that all of that stuff tracks. So whatever you pull up in Picard’s computer needs to be correct by the time we end our run… so far we know we have never heard about her. We have never heard Spock and Sarek speak about her. So it is our job to make sure that what we have seen, still holds water.”

They also confirm that in regards to a second season, nothing is official as yet.
 

Doctor Omega

Member: Rank 10
They also confirm that in regards to a second season, nothing is official as yet.
Interesting.

As soon as something gets a good rating they usually start crowing about not only twenty seasons planned, but spin-offs too! Could the ratings for this thing have been less than stellar? :emoji_confused:
 
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