More Trek
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Kirk's dad.
Just finished it. This is Star Trek at its best. A bit preachy and maybe a little too much introspection, but Pike's did serve the story.
Like it. Like seeing a story wrapped up in an episode.
Kirk's dad.
George Samuel Kirk made his first appearance on Star Trek: The Original Series. He was introduced as James’ older brother.
The character, who was a scientist, made a very brief appearance on the show and was portrayed by William Shatner.
More specifically, Samuel, who was often referred to as ‘Sam,’ was a research biologist living on the planet Deneva. He was married to a woman named Aurelan, portrayed by Joan Swift, and had three sons.
Sam gets killed by flying parasites and it was James, who’s usually referred to as Jim, who found his dead body at the start of “Operation – Annihilate!”
Just finished it. This is Star Trek at its best. A bit preachy and maybe a little too much introspection, but Pike's did serve the story.
Like it. Like seeing a story wrapped up in an episode.
Well, ST:TOS as well as TNG and to a lesser extent DS9 were all very episodic in nature. That's the way all TV was back in the dark ages. I would have to say that Babylon 5 began to break that mold in the mid-1990s.
But yeah, it's "Trek," to be sure. Goes off the rails a bit, and, as you say, a bit preachy at times. Overall, a sold 4 out of 5 stars.
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I assume there were no birds anywhere.
When conservatives dominate pop culture, there'll be a scene in their version of Star Trek where the kid tugs on his dad's sleeve and asks "daddy, what did birds sound like?" Then the dad will describe the beautiful singing, lost forever to the avian genocide of windmills. Sometimes, he'll explain, society gets caught up by evil ideologues, like Hitler, Putin, and Thunberg. But eventually, the good, conservative progressives lead the way for a better future.
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I assume there were no birds anywhere.
When conservatives dominate pop culture, there'll be a scene in their version of Star Trek where the kid tugs on his dad's sleeve and asks "daddy, what did birds sound like?" Then the dad will describe the beautiful singing, lost forever to the avian genocide of windmills. Sometimes, he'll explain, society gets caught up by evil ideologues, like Hitler, Putin, and Thunberg. But eventually, the good, conservative progressives lead the way for a better future.
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Episode 2 was maybe better than 1.
A worthy successor and much better than Discovery or Picard.
Episode 2 was maybe better than 1.
Maybe. At least its equal. I'm enjoying the Uhura backstory, and Pike's struggle with his mortality. I wonder how they'll deal with that, considering that it's canon that Pike dies.
A worthy successor and much better than Discovery or Picard.
And how. It also shows how well episodic TV can be done. I hope it keeps it up.
"Spock's girlfriend," LOL.
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Ah, but he doesn't die! He gets all messed up, but still alive, and as they dhow him here, in the chair like ST original. I cannot help but wonder if he will escape that fate.
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Well done.
VERY well done.
It's Classic "Trek" at its best. It gets a bit maudlin and preachy in this episode, but still has the right mix of adventure and excitement. This could have been an episode from 1967, because Gorn. Yep, Gorn.
Episodic TV still works.
Oh, in sick bay, they showed a bag of "plasma" hanging...
That's really what it looks like.
It's usually a 500 ml bag, but who knows what it'll be in 300 years, right?
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But we did not SEE the Gorn, unlike the original, where they were reptilian.
Still, excellent Trek. Best of the spinoff series so far, and aren't the special effects great?
Mount is superb. The new Spock is believable. Some of the women are overdone, but what the heck.
Looking forward to E5, which promises to be funny.
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But we did not SEE the Gorn, unlike the original, where they were reptilian.
Still, excellent Trek. Best of the spinoff series so far, and aren't the special effects great?
Mount is superb. The new Spock is believable. Some of the women are overdone, but what the heck.
Looking forward to E5, which promises to be funny.
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Very very "Trek-ey."
They've done an excellent job of telling the story of characters we all know into a contemporary setting - albeit set before ST:TOS.
A suffice amount of Trek Technobabble. The required amount of "just campy-enough" costumes. Sets are typical Trek from the 1960s, but not as cheap-looking.
The kid was annoying AF.
Spock is great, Nurse Chappel is...well @jon-nyc would hit that.
And the best hair of the show belongs to Pike.
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Enjoying this SO much. It's a throwback in the best sense:
Anson Mount’s Christopher Pike feels like a massive gift to Star Trek fans. He’s full of the charisma and verve that made us fall hard for Captain Kirk, but has the sensitivity and philosophical bent of a Picard. He is the kind of man we’d all follow across the stars, into black holes, and to the surfaces of wayward comets. That’s because Pike is the kind of leader who believes in his crew. Thereby he believes in all of us.
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds works because it feels so much like a great throwback to the bones of what makes Star Trek great. And Anson Mount’s Christopher Pike is emblematic of the values that made us love Star Trek in the first place. He’s all the greatest values of Starfleet wrapped up in the image of a classic swashbuckling hero. He is simply perfect.
In episode 5, did you notice the music in the the opening Spock dream?
In episode 6, did you notice the music at the end, when Pike is standing and looking out the window of his cabin, holding a glass of (not cheap) whiskey? Straight out of ST:TNG....at least a bit.