oh! a new cars post! :-D
oh, it's in the star trek thread. >:-(
oh! a new cars post! :-D
oh! it's in the star trek thread! >:-)
I will never be able to remove this commercial from my brain. pic.twitter.com/uv0bu4GwEU
— Toby Jones (@tobytobyjones) May 14, 2020
Populares posted:Is deep space nein worth watching if you enjoyed TNG?
yes, it took the best elements of tng and the best characters of tng and put them into an infinitely superior show
cars posted:Bold move to show New York City as part of slave-dependent dystopia The Dominion but I have to respect it.
Similar setup
cars posted:
being the post 9/11 show, it was understandably ramped up with all the americana bullshit, as the title sequence and absurd theme music indicates
interestingly, they changed the title sequence for a two-part special set in the mirror universe (EARTH BAD GUYS)
the imagery drops the americana shit for Stuka dive-bombers and various Soviet aircraft, including the MiG-25/MiG-31, T-72 tanks, and Buk SAMs
Soviet_Salami posted:I wonder if there were skeptical Bajorans
The Bajorans may as well have been written up by a sober Christopher Hitchens. They're utter dumbasses. There was a whole "imminent civil war" thing in the early seasons that just got dropped hard for no particular reason, and when the virgin emissary was discovered they stopped cargo-culting the chad Sisko in favour of reverting to aforementioned Hitchenseque caste zealots.
I am finally of the opinion that Enterprise is Basically Good. Also the mirror eps gave Travis a mild Simon Phoenix vibe which should have been more overt. And Punished Trip, An Engineer Denied His Warp also pleases me.
Those "mirror universe" episodes prove that fourth-season Enterprise produced decent TV, because after Deep Space Nine slowly steered the concept into the ground and before Discovery shoved its best actor inside and drilled it into a lake of magma, there's somehow that Enterprise two-parter where they pretend the entire show's always been about a cartoon-evil crew from the cartoon-evil place whose every waking moment finds them consumed with envy of Star Trek as though it's something ridiculously wonderful they'll never be, and it's cute and fun and one of the high points of the franchise, even though it's about nothing except the franchise itself and the show's failed relationship with the rest of it. This is impossible but it happened.
Travis Mayweather is Enterprise in a nutshell. The actor who plays him, Anthony Montgomery, improves his craft over the show's run almost as much as Blalock does, but even when he seems like a kid who thought his audition was for a one-shot Law & Order suspect, he still appears in every scene with this glittering cloud of charisma around him that outshines everyone on the main cast but John Billingsley. There's a run of four episodes where Enterprise finally figures out what to do with that. The next episode is the last episode of the show.
The one good episode of Picard's House follows the last-second cliffhanger where Jeri Ryan shows up, the most talented actor in the entire short history of Picard the show. She has the same name as her Voyager character but instead of that character, she plays a shell-shocked alcoholic who flash-boils a bunch of weird '90s fan diddling over Seven of Nine and Captain Janeway and pops out as a monologuing lezploitation monster-woman whose only goal is to ray-gun her psychopath ex-girlfriend into cinders, along with Gene Roddenberry's Democrat dream and every argument anyone has ever tried to make for Star Trek as some kind of social movement, also she succeeds. In the middle of Patrick Stewart's seventh performance as an extremely British man from France, he plays a frog-accented flesh peddler with an eyepatch he flips up to register shock that his disguise didn't keep anyone from recognizing a big-time celebrity who did an interview on space CNN a few days ago, a plan of vast & obvious idiocy that the show plays completely straight right up to the punchline as the genius brain child of the two ultra-smart fan favorites from other shows. Picard's sad-sack burnout best friend gets humiliated in front of everyone when the sex planet they visit sends her a personalized advertisement for weed, then she goes to visit her estranged son, who cringes when she tries to touch him and tells her awkwardly to leave him and his polite young wife alone. It's like someone convinced David Lynch to punch up a Star Trek script, and he couldn't come anywhere close to fixing it before he sobered up so he made them take his name off the credits. Any way the rest of the show is a lot worse.
cars posted:Really want to write up my blast furnace on how Picard sucks. but I keep getting distracted because to do that I have to bring up the one good episode, which is cool and clever and dumb and gross in a way I don't like so much as I admire it. It's like something from the first season of a different show that's better than Picard but doesn't have its shit together enough to last and isn't named after famous Star trek Picard so it's cancelled before it airs.
The one good episode of Picard's House follows the last-second cliffhanger where Jeri Ryan shows up, the most talented actor in the entire short history of Picard the show. She has the same name as her Voyager character but instead of that character, she plays a shell-shocked alcoholic who flash-boils a bunch of weird '90s fan diddling over Seven of Nine and Captain Janeway and pops out as a monologuing lezploitation monster-woman whose only goal is to ray-gun her psychopath ex-girlfriend into cinders, along with Gene Roddenberry's Democrat dream and every argument anyone has ever tried to make for Star Trek as some kind of social movement, also she succeeds. In the middle of Patrick Stewart's seventh performance as an extremely British man from France, he plays a frog-accented flesh peddler with an eyepatch he flips up to register shock that his disguise didn't keep anyone from recognizing a big-time celebrity who did an interview on space CNN a few days ago, a plan of vast & obvious idiocy that the show plays completely straight right up to the punchline as the genius brain child of the two ultra-smart fan favorites from other shows. Picard's sad-sack burnout best friend gets humiliated in front of everyone when the sex planet they visit sends her a personalized advertisement for weed, then she goes to visit her estranged son, who cringes when she tries to touch him and tells her awkwardly to leave him and his polite young wife alone. It's like someone convinced David Lynch to punch up a Star Trek script, and he couldn't come anywhere close to fixing it before he sobered up so he made them take his name off the credits. Any way the rest of the show is a lot worse.
i agree completely
i think i have to apologize for the existance of lower decks. its a monkey's paw thing. sorry
Horselord posted:the ship comes alive and gives birth
i really need to rewatch Farscape someday
Populares posted:I just saw the scene that cars av is from.
I know that it was likely not cars’ intention, but I mentally picture cars as the confused person in the foreground rather than the smirking alien in the background. Sorry, im not a nerd and don’t know their names.
netflix has a thing called "final space" which is unfunny and both the characters and the way everything is drawn and coloured is obnoxious. lower decks is like you ran that through a machine learning programs thats been trained on memory alpha. the character i only know as "loud woman" talks too fast but what i could make out of it she was just yelling shit like "dianna troi has huge titties" and "WORF" over and over as she waved a bottle of romulan ale around
it was exhausting and boring at the same time
dimashq posted:Populares posted:I just saw the scene that cars av is from.
I know that it was likely not cars’ intention, but I mentally picture cars as the confused person in the foreground rather than the smirking alien in the background. Sorry, im not a nerd and don’t know their names.
i'm taking notes
Attempts to divine my intentions are adorable though and I appreciate the respect and effort put into them.