Stormygeddon

joined 2 years ago
[–] Stormygeddon@startrek.website 2 points 2 days ago (2 children)

Might be a bit off beat to say this, but maybe the first episode of Prodigy?

It's very much intended as an entry point into Star Trek for those unexposed to Star Trek.

I'm reminded how I basically never bought a Star Trek merch as much as I like the shows.

[–] Stormygeddon@startrek.website 6 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (1 children)

S3E1

-Strangely flat ground in that one Gorn ship set where it looked like with all those biomechanical growths and wires it should be a little more textured.

-In the Climax, They were doing that slow frame thing that was popular in the early 2000s and has gone out of style. Was a bit jarring.

-Are they switching to a practical suit for this season's Gorn. The Gorn looked a little more "rubbery" this time around but I don't want to go back to compare.

-I liked the Gremlins 2 look of the Gorn Hatchlings on the back.

St3E2

-Sexy Spock is so back.

-When that training session was sbeing interrupted, I expected Uhura to flex with speaking some Spanish to the Ortegas, but she didn't. And then they just proceeded to tell "be careful around Uhura she knows ___ languages" which just made that expected moment stand out even more. Plus the whole Spanish speaking thing kind of took me out of it as I still think of Star Trek as having some universal translation convention, like with that one episode of Discovery.

-The music being whimsical sounding felt so forced, like it was forcing the whimsy on the regular old scenes with the Bar Tender. I suppose that's half the point, and half an allusion to the original series, but it took me out of it. The LD crossover episode did something similar too.

-Spock punching instead of doing a Vulcan neck pinch felt so wrong, not quite in line with the less-violent TOS Spock, but that was an energy being induced punch so it checks out.

-Feels a bit weird hearing a modern song in Star Trek (even though it's from the 80s. Edit: forgot about two other modern songs in this episode too). Usually they refrain from it which helped some other shows like The Orville have more of an identity by referencing pop culture.

-I'm glad Ortegas is finally getting a subplot. In the previous seasons she's always felt like she was missing "her" focus episode which other members of the crew like M'Benga got. All she had was "I fly the ship" which was a bit lame. Though feels off, like maybe it's recycling some discarded script for La'an's PTSD, or they couldn't quite figure out what to do with Erica so they're trying something more generic. I'm interested to see where it goes.

[–] Stormygeddon@startrek.website 2 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Any word as to when?

[–] Stormygeddon@startrek.website 5 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (1 children)

That's it? That's the lost Time Lord? It was one minute of a bony CGI monster! Defeated with a secondhand thought, literally the secondhand to a clock! I guess I do kind of like tying how the Rani thought herself so superior to the human race but then being so unceremoniously finished in return. I don't like how Omega was just "grr, me hungry." I thought his main motivations was from being lonely and I think back to him trying to have the Doctor(s) stay with him.

The whole Poppy subplot kind of rubs me the wrong way. For one, there is a non-consenting aspect to it, suddenly having a hybrid child. Belinda didn't really want for one, and it's a bit of an "accident." The Doctor didn't really ask for it either. I don't see them as a romantic pairing, and the forcing of them to be one in the Wish World was supposed to be uncomfortable, as the Doctor in this generation is supposed Gay coded (could be pan, but doesn't matter) and the Doctor generally doesn't romance his companions. All right, so they had a wish baby without clapping humie cheeks, that can be an interesting consequence. But then they pull the rug and make that baby just a human baby, and the manner of which this baby was placed into existence was by force much like how the secondary antagonist of the last couple episodes did to the whole world. Once again Belinda didn't ask for this child as she has forgotten about Poppy and is disturbed at (and laughs off) the implication of having a (forgotten) child with the Doctor. It just all feels without express consent, uninvited/forced, unearned, and uncomfortable. For the other, it feels irrelevant as a consequence and forced the co-lead Belinda to basically have nothing to do. We didn't have many moments with her having her own agency as a character all eight episodes this season and Poppy was the contrived reason she was put in a box this finale—not even a figurative box, a literal box. There could have been some sort of parallel of Belinda and Poppy being stuck in eternity in an unchanging prison like Omega, but they didn't do something with that either.

Anyway, I was sad to see Ncuti Gatwa go. It feels so soon. He didn't even face Daleks. He'll probably be remembered as the one who cries every episode and was too short lived. At least he had a couple good episodes like Dot and Bubble, Lux, or 73 Yards. If they were going to bring in one of the other Doctors anyway, I'd have liked for the cameo for Matt Smith to have been extended, or at the very least do something with the bigenerated doctor too. I'm sure introducing Billie Piper is going to result in some gimmicky contrived mess.

[–] Stormygeddon@startrek.website 3 points 1 month ago (3 children)

I didn't realize people thought twice about the Dugga Doo

[–] Stormygeddon@startrek.website 3 points 1 month ago (4 children)

It's a little weird after so many years to see the Doctor specifically called "Doctor Who" as a name for multiple sentences.

[–] Stormygeddon@startrek.website 2 points 2 months ago

It feels a bit longer than two years.

[–] Stormygeddon@startrek.website 5 points 2 months ago (2 children)

There's still the "mavity" gag going on.

[–] Stormygeddon@startrek.website 1 points 2 months ago

The whole "it's set in Lagos" thing felt oversold as window dressing when it mostly takes place in a barbershop that could've been anywhere.

[–] Stormygeddon@startrek.website 2 points 2 months ago

I didn't realize how I missed Ruby until we checked in on her again. The Aesop of this episode was a little too hammered in though, baseball caps included.

[–] Stormygeddon@startrek.website 2 points 2 months ago (1 children)

I'm a little sad to see Santa's sleigh go and likely never return, but dang is the new Grimnar cool. I wonder if there is going to be any special story to Grimnar's crossing of the Rubicon Primaris. I bet Ragnar Blackmane is jealous Grimnar got to keep his pet wolves when he didn't.

 

The whales Gracie and George were stated to have wandered into San Francisco as calves. Outside of feeding events which can include the famous bubble nets, humpback whale pods usually consist of a lone mother and calf (or calves) pairing with a trailing "escort" male. Humpbacks are one of the few mammals that can be nursing and still get pregnant. So anyway, the implication seems to be that if they were both calves and coming in the same time as a pod, they must have been orphaned from their mother and part of the same family group. Therefore, when its later revealed that Gracie is pregnant this one question comes to mind:

"Was the pregnancy a product of incest?"

No wonder they were originally going to be called Adam and Evie.

 
 
 
 

The show had already established how Tendi has green blood earlier in the series after an injury and it would have been an easy to infer detail compared to humans in the show.

Other animated shows like Steven Universe already show how non-pink blush colors can work in animation.

 
 

By that I mean that the basic premise being: that the means of (re)creating new technology is lost, the current technology around is treated as sacred and the function marred in elaborate rituals or prayers because they don't know how to otherwise operate it, and to a lesser extent that new ideas or (often xenophillic) research is met with suspicion or outright rejected because it doesn't fit with the religious dogma.

I keep feeling that a similar group is somewhere in Star Trek, right on the cusp of my memory, but I can't seem to recall any specific examples.

view more: next ›