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selenak: (Vulcan)
I had an extremely busy week, so am very late with my reviewes.

Paradise 2.04 )


Star Trek: Starfleet Academy 1.09 )
selenak: (Father Issues by Raven_annabella)
In which we find out the writers of this show must really like both Thornton Wilder and the last two seasons of Angel: The Series while having issues with one particular Voyager episode, or rather its aftermath. Also, at last, at last, SOMEONE is back an my screen!

Spoilers take back a key nitpick from last week and are an Angel fan anyway )
selenak: Siblings (Michael and Spock)
In which we get what is clearly supposed to be the Star Trek: Starfleet Academy equivalent of the TNG episode Family - but is it?

Spoilers want to watch meteor showers as well… )
selenak: (Discovery)
Because there was good word of mouth from various friends and trusty reviewers, I decided to give the latest Star Trek show a go, have now marathoned the six episodes released so far, and can report that word of mouth was correct: this latest installment, which is set in the 31rd century last seen in Star Trek: Discovery, shows none of the weaknesses of the third season of ST: SNW and is actually really good. Mind you, watching the first three episodes I thought, okay, they're good, not not groundbreaking, and some of the reactions made me expect more, but then came episodes 3 - 6 . building on the previous ones and fleshing out more characters, and I went "wow!" myself. And also "awwwww" at certain points. More beneath the spoiler cut.


The reason why I wasn't wowed by the first three in the way I was by the later three is that they included some clichés I never much cared for, such as a Marine, err, Starfleet instructor yelling "give me 100 pushups" . And the only school/school prank war I enjoyed fictionally was Das fliegende Klassenzimmer by Erich Kästner, plus I thought, really, do we need more mean Vulcans. These nitpicks aside (and the prank war did have its plusses as well), the first three episodes do a solid job in introducing the premise, the setting, and some of the main characters. They also showed versatality in format: the pilot episode has more action while the second episode is a classic ST ethical dilemma with lots of debate type of episode (and not the last one of the first six), and the third episode while having some serious character stuff mainly goes for broad comedy. Which is all fine, and confidence-building, but with episode 4, the show simply becomes more than that as we get our first hardcore (previously supporting) character episode which simultanously is an ethical dilemma episode and adds to the overall Star Trek lore because it tells us how the Klingons fared post Burn, something Disco did not. Now after a quiet spotlight on supporting character episode I expected the next to revert back to ensemble or main character format, but no! We got another " (different) supporting character in the spotlight" episode - which also doubled as an unabashed love declaration to one Benjamin Sisko in particular and DS9 in general. Which was great, because while other more recent ST shows did include some nods to DS9, it never got as much love as TOS and TNG did from the new kids on the block. Until now. And it was especially lovely to see because it did nostalgia right instead of going ST: Picard season 3, sigh, or follow ST:STNW's increasing tendency to become ST: TOS in its cast. Instead, it did a Star Trek: Prodigy. By which I mean: The love for the "old" characters as strong and great - but it was used in service of character fleshing out and growth of the new characters of the new show. Complimenting them, instead of replacing them. Homage, instead of a rerun. It was great. And then episode 6 went for a taut space thriller while also using what we learned so far about the characters and sharpening the profile of who seems to be the season's main villain. (And it took me until this episode to finally recall where I had heard the voice before. It was John Adams, I mean Paul Giametti!)

One more general observation: As a Discovery fan, I was delighted to see Admiral Vance again in most of the episodes, being his calm and responsible self, ditto for Jett Reno snarkng and being dead-pan as ever, and a bit surprised that Mary Wiseman has yet to make an appearance because I thought she was supposed to be a regular. Speaking of Discovery, its last two seasons feature a supporting guest star, Laira Rillak, who has both Bajoran and Cardassian heritage, and I thought that was great and that by the 31st Centuy, there ought to be a lot more "hybrids" of spacefaring nations with centuries of interaction . Starfleet Academy thought so, too, and we got indeed not just another hybrid in the regular cast but also several others popping up. And I really like the sheer number of middle-aged women we get in addition to the kids. Oh, and evidently the return to Discovery territory also meant the return to featured queer relationships. Excellent.

Now onto more spoilery territory with comments on the individiual characters and their development so far. )

In conclusion: it's a really good first season so far! May it continue to be!

Vid recs

Feb. 1st, 2026 06:24 pm
selenak: (Holmes and Watson by Emme86)
Festivids went online. I can't create vids myself, but I love watching them. Here are some which especially caught my eye this year:




Babylon 5 : I loved all three of this year's B5 vids, but Marching On really is a love letter to the entire show, and I adore it.


Conclave : The Devil you know : in which there is scheming, rise and fall, and gorgeous cinematography. Captures the spirit (and performances) of the movie really well.


Elementary: Read my mind: my favourite incarnations of Holmes and Watson get a superb outing in this one.


Foundation: So it goes: captures the grandeur, the insanity, the messed up parent/mentor/child (protegé) relationships really really well. (No material from the third season used as far as I can tell, if anyone hasn't watched it yet and doesn't want to be spoiled.)

Knives Out Movies: Now you know: Sondheim/Knives Out OTP! Witty and moving take on all three leads, their stories and the connecting elements.

Star Trek: Prodigy: Find your people: which is what our young heroes do so very well in this lovely show - and in this vid.
selenak: (Seven by Cheesygirl)
Eleven / Kathryn Janeway: Why? She's his type. Unlike many another version of the Doctor, he's good at endearing himself to competent authoritative women. Depending on when in their respective timelines this meeting occurs, he might also impress her by bringing his very own nurse (Rory) along, which given that Voyager is desperate enough for nurses to let their own Doctor draft Tom Paris will definitely be a plus.


Five / Benjamin Sisko: Why? Mutual bonding over argumentative companions and cricket vs baseball. Five would be charmed by the Ben and Jake father/son relationship (and depending on whether this is before or after Adric dies also melancholic), and wouldn't ruffle Sisko's feathers the way some other Doctors might.


Nine / Jean-Luc Picard: Why? Picard would respect Nine's chip on the shoulder and not wanting to talk about any personal issues (and vice versa). (Though Deanna Troi, sensing Nine's emotional state, wilil try to corner him, but that's another issue.) Depending on the situation they're in when they meet, there might be some prickliness at first, but I think generally they'd find it easy to ally against the menace of the day and maybe share clipped yet meaningful conversation over some tea and/or bond over Dickens once that's done before Nine takes off again.


Fifteen/ Michael Burnham : Why? Much of her personal arc is going from repressing it all stoicism to openly emotional behavior, accepting your past grief and guilt and continuing to do better (and helping others) in the present - that's what he's practically the embodiment of for the Doctor! They would work well as allies, and there would definitely be dancing at some point. Also, she'd make him promise to visit Zora now and then as he travels through time.


Three / Saru (who was a Starfleet Captain, too): Why? Three can come across as incredibly high handed on first impressions, but Saru is a masterful diplomat, would spot Three is actually knowledgable and competent beneath the bluster and would lintrigue him as a Kelpian so any initial problems would be quickly moved aside in favour of teaming up. 'They would also bond over Buddhism.


Thirteen/ James T. Kirk: Why? No, not because he'd hit on her. (TOS Kirk, not AOS Kirk, i.e. he's not his pop cultural stereotype.) She'd consider him fun to have an adventure with, he'd be curious and charmed and very amused once she inadvertendly outs Scotty's inflated time estimations, whereas with male versions of the Doctor he might feel initially one-upped.


Twelve/ Christopher Pike: Why? Even if it's early Twelve at his prickliest, Pike's general relaxedness and experienced diplomacy would help smoothing things over. Conversely, Twelve could empathize with the whole "knowing your eventual awful fate" part without insisting on talking about it the way some other Doctors might. I predict at least one meal cooked by Pike while Twelve plays guitar before the Doctor leaves again.


Unfortunately, I can't think of any version of the Doctor who'd get along really well with Captain Archer because Archer would, depending on the point of his timeline, suspect the Doctor of being a tool of the Vulcan High Command, the Admiralty or the Xindi, while the Doctor, any of them, might like Porthos but would find Archer incredibly annoying, and that's before they find out about certain episodes involving slavery or torture.


Therefore, you get a bonus pairing:

Seven/ Gabriel Lorca (no, not the one we never met, I do mean the season 1 of Discovery guy) : Why? Mutual mindgames! Who manipulates whom best? Who sets a trap for whom while pretending to be their harmless facade? Who figures out the truth about the the other guy first? Might there be conversations with increasingly disturbing subtext about mentoring young women with a chip on their shoulder and tremendous guilt and anger issues? One thing is sure: it would be incredibly entertaining.


The other days
selenak: (Royal Reader)
From [personal profile] astrogirl. Clearly, I must write stories to cover the J and X gaps.


Rules: How many letters of the alphabet have you used for starting a fic title? One fic per line, ‘A’ and 'The’ do not count for 'a’ and ’t’. Post your score out of 26 at the end, along with your total fic count.



A - Age of Iron (I Medici, Lorenzo "Il Magnifico" de' Medici/Francesco de' Pazzi)

B - Bad Reputation (16th Century CE RPF, Barbara Blomberg & Fernando Álverez Toledo III. Duque de Alba)

C - Cover her face ( The King's Touch - Jude Morgan, 17th Century RPF; Henriette Anne Stuart (Henriette d'Angleterre)

D - Discordance (Merlin (TV), Morgana & Gwen)

E - Eve of Destruction (To Walk Invisible (2016), 19th Century RPF, Branwell Bronte/ Joseph Bentley Leyland)

F - Five ways in which Frederick the Great and Maria Theresia did not meet (18th Century CE RPF, Frederick the Great & Maria Theresia)

G - Graham O'Brien's Survival Kit for Companions (Doctor Who, Graham O'Brien & Thirteenth Doctor)

H - Here lie we (Merlin (TV), Gwen & Morgana)

I - Invicta (3rd Century CE RPF, Helena (Mother of Constantine)


J -

K -Kin (Merlin (TV), Arthur & Morgana)

L - Learning Frederick (18th Century CE RPF, Frederick the Great/Michael Gabriel Fredersdorf)

M - Murder in Florence (16th Century RPF, Margaret of Parma, Alessandro "Il Moro" de'Medici/ Lorenzo "Lorenzino" di Pierfrancesco de' Medici)

N - Nusquam (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Ziyal & Dukat)

O - Opposites (Beatles RPF, Yoko Ono, Yoko Ono & Paul McCartney)

P - Prussian Doll (18th Century RPF, Frederick the Great & Prince Henry of Prussia, Frederick the Great/Michael Gabriel Fredersdorf)

Q - Queen's Gambit (Don Carlos - Friedrich Schiller, Elisabeth de Valois & Princess Eboli, Elisabeth de Valois & Philipp II of Spain)

R - Repercutio (Babylon 5, Londo Mollari & G'kar)

S - She blinded me with science (18th Century RPF', Émilie du Chatelet/Voltaire)

T - Till our shadows blend (Babylon 5, Delenn & Londo Mollari)

U - Unforgivable (Angel the Series, Holtz & Connor)

V - Vita Guineveris (Merlin (TV), Gwen (Guinevere)

W - We happy few (Beatles RPF, Brian Epstein & The Beatles)

X -

Y - You should see me in a crown (18th Century CE RPF, Catherine the Great & Prince Henry of Prussia)

Z - Zinc Man (The Americans (TV), Elizabeth Jennings/Philip Jennings)


That's 24 letters out of 275 stories. For easiness, I started with the most recent ones, but even so, clearly history is a dominating theme. Also, I would have bet Z to be the most difficult letter to find, but no, The Americans came through for me.
selenak: (Music)
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds finished its third season, and you may have deduced from the fact I didn't review the remaining episodes that for me, it did not take a turn for the better. The Ortegas episode was probably the most, in lack of a better term, Trekian, not to mention the long awaited one with a focus on Ortegas beyond "I fly the ship", but it shares with far too many ST: SNW episodes the way it is just incredibly derivative, of both other franchises and earlier ST. And the series finale chose to pick my least favourite DS9 plotline and scenario, sigh. To complete my turn to an old grouch, the feeling of this season as Star Trek: The Rom Com didn't help, either. Anyway. I'll always have Discovery and Prodigy in terms of new ST that manages to unite both affection for the past AND originality and the courage to try out new paths and characters.
*****

Given the daily horror show that is the news, it's all the more important to find joy in fannish things, so I was delighted to discover this new Sense 8 vid. Now there was a show celebrating joy and diversity:

Sense 8

Voice in my Throat

***

And on another joyful note: Yuletide nominations have started!

Meme Time!

Aug. 11th, 2025 06:32 pm
selenak: (Gwen by Redscharlach)
Meme time! Bear in mind that we Germans used to get not just tv shows about a year later than they were broadcast (if not longer), and even blockbuster movies took their own sweet time in ye olde days before getting released overseas. This changed in the past 25 or so years, of course, and now we sometimes get to see coproductions in Germany before they're released in the US, and can stream tv shows simultanously.


MCU Meme from [personal profile] vaysh and [personal profile] muccamukk:


Bold = Watched Entirety
Italic = Watched Part
* Watched more than once.
† Watched in the first few weeks of release (at least initially, for TV shows).

It seems I watched a lot of Marvel )

Star Trek Meme from [personal profile] aurumcalendula :

Bold = Watched Entirety
Italic = Watched Part
* Watched more than once.
† Watched in the first few weeks of release (at least initially, for TV shows).
And I've watched even more Star Trek )
selenak: (Demerzel and Terminus)
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds: Alas, the last two episodes were so incredibly mediocre that I can't bring myself to properly review. I'll watch the rest of the season, but if it doesn't pick up in quality soon, that will be it for me. Shame, I like the characters, but now they're really going for the laziest storytelling and took completely the wrong lessons from what worked before. On to the sci fi tv show which keeps enthralling me:

Foundation 3.04.: In which a long term mystery is finally resolved, and new questions arise. )
selenak: (Discovery)
In which it's time for the charming nostalgia show again.

While the season opener resolves last season's cliffhanger, episode 2 makes one of Peter David's inventions canon )
selenak: (bodyguard - Sabine)
Of which I am a delighted consumer, not a creator. Here are some I especially liked this year:


Babylon 5: Ordinary Day: the every day craziness of life on Babylon 5, delightfully captured in this vid.

Derry Girls: you told the drunks I knew karate: Speaking of every day craziness...

Holiday: Maps for the Getaway: it's an unresolved debate whether Katherine Hepburn's best on screen partner was Spencer Tracy or Cary Grant; I think the movies she did with Grant were more anarchic in spirit, and Holiday is a case in point. (It was also shot before Cary Grant's movie persona solidified; you can see traces of his British vaudeville background here still.) This vid is a lovely tribute to their partnership.

Peter Pan: Atlantis Princess: the 2003 Peter Pan is for my money still the best, the one and only really good on screen rendition of Barrie's story, capturing the joy and the darkness instead of favouring one, and definitely has the best Peter (not to mention the only one actually in costume as imagined by Barrie instead of flaunting the Disney look) and Wendy. This vid focuses on the joy side, which I don't mean as a criticism - it's a vid, not a movie - and does so beautifully.

Star Trek: Prodigy: The Sky Is Calling: in a few decades, someone is going to write their thesis about how two gigantic franchises some across as exhausted in several of their "adult" endeavours but simultanously created magic in their show aimed at kids. ST: Prodigy is one of the cases in point, and this vid captures so much of it.

Some like it Hot: Girls just wanna have fun: reading Daphne in Billy Wilder's "Some like it hot" as trans is a very popular interpretation, but in the current climate, with some much hate exploding all around us, it feels like a luxuriant balm to watch this vid gently and joyfully celebrating the character and the movie's queer themes.
selenak: (KircheAuvers - Lefaym)
Star Trek: Section 31: You could very much tell this started out as a series concept, I thought. Presumably if it had been a series instead of a movie, we'd have gotten more time to get to know the crew team individually, the "who's the mole?" part would have played out over two episodes at least, and something too spoilery to describe uncut would have happened ). As it was, it was enjoyable in a popcorn movie kind of way. There were some bits which I thought worked better than others - examples are spoilery again ) On a more positive note, Alok Sahar as a character did work for me: not only was he a new twist on a spoilery part of Trek lore ) but the actor has charisma and gravitas.

Also, I had been curious whether the series that became a movie would press the retcon button on Georgiou's development up to end including s3 of Discovery, and/or how they would handle her backstory, especially since s2 (but not s3) of Disco could have given you the impression of downplaying the enormity of what and who Georgiou had been, but actually for the most part I thought the movie handled that well, in a way accessible to new watchers who hadn't seen her elsewhere. More spoilerly comments ensue. )

All in all: a mixed affair, Michelle Yeoh gets to do her thing and does it well, but I don't mourn for the fact this didn't become a show.


Conclave: I had read the Robert Harris novel this movie is based on, and of which it is a very faithful adaption, save for the change of name and nationality of the leading character to accomodate for Ralph Fiennes playing him. In the book, he's an Italian named Jacobo Lomeli. In the movie, he's Thomas Lawrence. The only scene where this change is a bit awkward is one early on where Cardinal Tedesco (lead candidate of the traditionalistis) says to Lawrence/Lomeli (allied to the reformers) that the next Pope should be an Italian again. Since in the book, he's talking to a fellow Italian, that conversation makes sense despite them belonging into different ideological camps, but in the movie, it's a bit unclear why Tedesco even bothers. Still, Fiennes gives such a great performance that I really don't feel like complaining - and I've seen Ralph Fiennes deliver good performances before, through the decades. He really deserves that Oscar nomination, all the more so because Lawrence is a quiet, subtle character, who has to handle several major organisational horrors and mysteries along with a personal crisis of faith. I've read three Harris novels and they each employ something a mystery/detective structure without being outright mysteries; Lawrence, our pov character, isn't just the man in charge of leading the Conclave, i.e. the assembly of Cardinals who need to elect the next Pope, and the papal elections form the thriller part of the story in both book and film, he also has to figure out several mystery like questions about several of the frontrunners who each have secrets that impact on their candidacy.

The film is directed by the same director responsible for the most recent adaptation of All Quiet on the Western Front, and I think you can tell from the way sound is used, but I thought this movie has a far firmer grip on giving personalities on all of its considerable ensemble of characters. (The acting is superb all around.) The cinematography is also gorgeous, and btw, extra points for the Nuns wearing actual post Vatican 2, Italy today clothing, not the pre Vatican 2 uniforms so beloved by American tv and movies. And the various twists and turns of the story are delivered smoothly, ratching up the suspense even when like me you know what's coming. Another pleasant surprise was that while Ralph Fiennes is Lawrence not Lomeli, he still speaks the occasional Italian, including in a key sermon he delivers, Bertinez occasionally switches to Spanish, Tedesco speaks almost exclusively in Italian, and of course there's Latin. (All subtitled when used.) I thought, as I did years ago when reading the book, that despite being a solid electiont thriller with scheming and backroom deals and so forth, it's amazingly uncynical in that everyone, including the less or downright unsympathetic Cardinals, is presented as being genuine about their faith; you do believe these men all originally became priests out of a spiritual longing, no matter what their current state. Which, btw, makes the fictional campaigning and election we're seeing play out here feel ever so much more intelligent and somehow ina better timeline than anything going or having gone on in our reality in recent months or now.

Isabella Rossellini being nominated for playing Sister Agnes reminded me of Judi Dench getting nominated for playing Queen Elizabeth in Shakespeare in Love, in that these are really tiny roles with just a few minutes of actual screen time, and the nomination is presumably meant for their entire life time of work, but also, in the few scenes they have, the ladies are excellent.

In conclusion: of the two, I'd call Conclave a must and Section 31 a "if you have nothing else on your plate", but Conclave doesn't have Michelle Yeoh, so there's that.
selenak: (Quark)
Well, considering one of the delightful things about seasons 1 and 2 was that they kept surprising me in a good way, I feel that I shouldn't really make predictions or requests, because I want the show to keep doing that, if there is a third season. For example, the first season had something of a Farscape vibe (while being utterly Trek), whereas the second season had something of a Doctor Who vibe (dito), and if the show creators want to tackle The Expanse next, I'd be all for it, but equally if they don't and do something very different entirely.

All this being said, here are some ideas and wishes:

Cut for some spoilers in Prodigy, Picard and DS9 )

- Again, these are just some ideas, but even if none of that happens: my main wish is for the show to continue its great level of storytelling.


The Other Days
selenak: (Spacewalk - Foundation)
[personal profile] bimo asked: Since Cavendish and I have recently finished binging For All Mankind, a show in which astronaut Danielle Poole outs herself as a major Star Trek fan: In which aspects would you expect a FAM universe version of Star Trek most likely to differ from ours?

Excellent question, fun for both fandoms. (Which share writers in the person of Ronald D. Moore.) Mind you, I had to look up when exactly TOS was broadcast, and found it finished on June 2, 1969, i.e. just when For All Mankind timeline departs from "our" universe (by letting the Soviets get to the Moon first), which means the entirety of TOS stays the same.

(If TOS had been broadcast two or three years later, I'd have said we'd have been spared the episode Turnabout Intruder, and also Uhura would have had Sulu's job, given the presence of female astronauts in the FAM universe from 1969 onwards.)

By the time TNG comes along, though, the differences are well and truly established, so instead of Patrick Stewart as Picard, we get Helen Mirren as Jeanne-Lucienne. (Sorry, Patrick Stewart. You still continue a fine career as a British character actor.) Ellen is still a senator and hasn't come out (TNG starts broadcasting in 1987, Ellen runs against Bill Clinton (and wins) in 1992), so American attitude towards homosexuality is still the same, which means no, Jeanne-Lucienne doesn't get to have repressed romantic feelings for Beverly Crusher (who still remains a woman), but otherwise she has basically the same characterisation (stoic, uneasy with kids, Shakespeare and archaelogy nerd). As to the fan reaction, while there is some of the same criticism Janeway got in our universe, it's not as much, not least because by this time, Danielle already has been commanding a few missions, and also, more consistent writing in TNG. (Mirren!Picard does get shipped by fandom with both male and female characters, of course. It's Helen Mirren! It's fandom!) The other thing different about TNG is that peace with the Klingons and Worf as a crew member is somewhat more controversial in fandom than in our timeline because while FOM does have Glasnost and Gorbachev, the US-Soviet rivalry went on far longer with greater heat (including that shootout on the moon), and the Klingons are definetely read as standing in for the Russians. But overall, FAM! Trekkers are on board with this.

Storywise, it's mostly the same for TNG, except there are a few more spy stories than there were already, and there is at least one shady rich entrepeneur character aiming at reintroducing money and privatizing space flight. Legend has it that this was first a Ferengi, but then some of the writing staff said "You cowards!", and it became a human character.

DS9, starting as it does basically simultanous to Will the astronaut and Ellen outing themselves, is mostly the same except for Garak/Bashir going from subtext to text. (Legend has it Ira Fehr pushed for Bashir/O'Brien instead, since they were his faves, but was told that would make Miles a cheater on his wife and he just wasn't that guy.) Which of course means no last second hookup with Ezri for Julian, but I'm afraid Jadzia still dies. Part of fandom gets upset and does "not my Star Trek!" demonstrations, and DS9 never reaches TNG's viewing levels, but as in our timeline, it gets regularly praised as the best and most ambitious of the Treks from this point onwards.

(JMS in the FAM timeline still is convinced they stole the idea of a space station from him. But B5, too, has some changes in this timeline, incuding Susan/Talia being more blatant from the get go instead of just sailing under the radar until "Divided Loyalties", and Delenn as well as the rest of the Minbari do get to be androgynous as originally planned, with Delenn only becoming female when she becomes half human.)

Voyager: has both minor and larger differences. For example, Harry Kim is definitely Korean and talks about it, because the American-Soviet-Korean basis on Mars is now a thing in the FAM timeline. Does Alt!Voyager use the premise of two originally hostile crews forced to work together for more and longer? I'm torn on this, because I do think in the FOMverse, there would be the identical problem that part of Voyager's writing and producing staff has been working non-stop in ST since the early TNG days and there is such a thing as creative exhaustion, plus they want to do the harmonious crew thing because of a perceived backlash on the more argumentative folks on DS9 (and they want to get the TNG ratings back here, too, and here, too, ST is no longer the sole SF game in town, and new very different SF shows have arrived, Farscape etc.). Then again, the Mars base might have served as an example of how to keep at least part of the crew at odds for longer. Because Janeway isn't the first female lead on a ST show any more, and female commanders and captains are now no longer unusual for the viewing audience, the writers can be more relaxed with her, having less to prove. But I'm afraid Janeway/Chakotay still doesn't happen, because of the Captain/Crew member problem. Hence also no Janeway/Seven. But Seven is officially gay (or bisexual) here already. (Still the same costume, I'm afraid.) One thing that is definitely different is that the Voyager crew is far often forced to trade for food and supplies because their technology starts to break down. This is a viewing audience which is familiar with at least some of the Mars supply situation (though not the worst details) and its difficulties, and thus wouldn't buy that the Voyager can basically endlessly resupply and repair this far from home.

Enterprise: Instead of a Southern guy, the main engineer is a grumpy Russian. This becomes awkward a bit once the coup happens and Soviet/US rivalry is back on, but that's minor because instead of the Xindi storyline in s3 being the effect of 9/11 happening, here we get an entire season where one early colony wants to become independent from Earth (mirroring events on Mars), and there a hugely controversial storyline where Archer tortures one of the rebel leaders whom he suspects of being responsible for a terrorist bombing of Headquarters on Earth. (Given what happened at the end of s2 of FAM, this is also regarded as exploiting a rl tragedy by some fans, buy others as a valid attempt to engage with problems of the present as ST often does.) Most of the remaining fans do love the fourth season (which is basically identical) and are pissed off by the finale .

...and that's how far the FAM timeline has carried us, and so I can't say what will happen further. :)

The other days
selenak: (Discovery)
Aka the long promised manifesto about what has become my favourite post DS9 Star Trek show, or version of Star Trek, full stop. Some preliminaries and disclaimers about what this isn't: A declaration that Discovery is best, or flawless. No ST movie or show is. Or that I'm 100% behind every plot or character decision. I'm not. People getting creative - which TPTB most certainly did with this show, which is one of the reasons why I fell in love with it - inevitably means that some of their ideas just doesn't work out the way they intended, or they didn't work out for this particular watcher. With every season, I praised and I nitpicked, in different degrees. This is how I do fandom. (When I reach the point where I catch myself only complaining and not enjoying anymore, I say goodbye.) With all these caveats being said, here's why I think Star Trek: Discovery isn't just a fabulous show, but specifically a fabulous Star Trek show:

1) Something New )

2.) Something Old )

3. Something Blue )

And there you have it: My personal Manifesto of love for Star Trek: Discovery!

The other days
selenak: (Seven)
Star Trek:Jeri Taylor has died. I associate her mostly with Voyager and Janeway - who was very much her creation -, but she did get her start in TNG and wrote The Drumhead, which to this day remains one of my favourite episodes. (Also a good example of why one episode with this basic premise works and another doesn't, when compared to a season 1 of Battlestar Galactica episode. In both cases, an actual act of sabotage happens and the investigation escalates to a MacCarthy-esque (as we said back in the day; this was before the last two decades, where more modern comparisons would apply) paranoia exercise, with civil liberties being dispensed with left, right and center, until it's the show's leading man on the dock. Here are my two main reasons why Jeri Taylor's version works for me better than Ron Moore's does: 1) in the TNG episode, one of the people on team Dispense with Civil Liberties In This Investigation is Worf, i.e. a sympathetic, heroic regular. Who doesn't snap out of it until late in the game. Whereas the BSG episode has only unsympathetic people on Team Paranoia, and our heroes holding firm. (Well, this is season 1. In later seasons....) Which robs the episode of some of it power and point that The Drumhead makes, i.e. that you can be full of good intentions and in still let your belief in "in times of danger, we have to dispense with the niceties and get our hands dirty for the greater good" drive you to a place where you do something unjustifiable. There is no magic protection against it by virtue of being a good person. The other better writing choice is that the original defendant in The Drumhead is a half Romulan whom the audience doesn't know, whereas as far as I recall, in BSG the ones on the lines are two sympathetic recurring characters. The difference is that Picard and friends have no more idea whether or not the half Romulan is guilty than the audience does. The emotional stakes are simply easier if it's someone we know and like getting accused from the start. So yeah: Jeri Taylor, I loved that episode.

Speaking of female showrunners, here's an interview with WandaVision and Agatha All Along show runner Jac Schaeffer about the latest episode. I rewatched some of WandaVision since we have to wait for another week for the Agatha All Along finale, and I have to say it holds up really well, and my two problems with the finale aren't really that heavy anymore. For external reasons, in a way. Meaning: stuff not in the show itself but what came after. What was most bothering me during my original watch was Monica's line in the finale where she told Wanda spoilery things ) I no longer think that, not least because of spoilery things )

Something else that watching Agatha All Along and WandaVision back to back hammered home to me is that Jac Schaeffer really excells at creating Marvel shows with multiple female roles that simultanously work as acting tour de force showcases. Elizabeth Olsen in none of the MCU movies has the chance to showcase the sheer variety she does in WandaVision, but as much as the show is built around her, it also offer a meaty character driven storyline for Monica Rambeau (who essentially gets (re-)introduced here as an adult character, does a great job with Darcy Lewis (a better one than the later Thor movies, imo) as a supporting character, and of course introduces Agatha as a great new MCU villain. Which isn't to say the male roles are background noise - Paul Bettany as Vision(s) also gets more to do, acting wise, than in any MCU movie save perhaps in his original appearance in Age of Ultron, and my rewatch had me paying more attention to the kids for obvious reasons, so I noticed one scene in particular ) which might have given Ms Schaeffer the idea to Read more... ) Also, the flashback to Agatha and her original coven and mother in Salem was especially interesting to me regarding the question as to whether or not Agatha can control her power when attacked by another witch. And the answer is spoilery. )
selenak: (Discovery)
Now I've avoided both Doctor Who and ST related interviews because I didn't want to be spoiled, but the constant hate-on Fandomsecrets has for my beloved Discovery has inadvertendly informed me RTD had the good taste to like it, so I googled, and the passage invoking the Disco hating folks' ire from an article/interview pre DW season premiere some months ago goes thusly:

Speaking to Davies ahead of the two-episode premiere, I had to ask what motivated him to include that little quip. He explained that while he’d been a more casual viewer of the older shows like the original series and The Next Generation, it was the newer shows that really turned him into a proper Star Trek fan. “I'm coming to love Star Trek with an absolute passion,” said Davies. “I love the old show. I always watched the old show, but when Star Trek: Discovery came along, I kind of became a proper fan.” It’s always nice to see Discovery get the flowers it deserves. Responsible for kicking off the current era of Star Trek, the series gets an unreasonable amount of flack on the internet for its commitment to diversity and inclusion — two hallmarks of the entire franchise.

Davies went on to praise more of the recent Trek series, even gushing about his crush on Captain Pike — and honestly, who doesn’t have a crush on Captain Pike. “So now I'm devoted, with Picard and Strange New Worlds. Frankly, the fact that I'm not married to Captain Pike is a major problem in my life, and I look to you, Collider, to put this right, frankly. It’s a wrong that needs righting,” Davies laughed. “I love that man. Oh, god, he's beautiful, Anson Mount. What a great name.”


The entire article is here. Crushing on Pike is understandable, and if there is ever an on screen DW/ST canonical crossover, I shall no longer be surprised.

BTW: I still intend to write the big "Why I love ST: Discovery" manifesto, but right now I really do not have the time.

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