Himynameischris
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lol that's pretty awesome
Wrath of Khan
Undiscovered Country
First Contact
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Galaxy Quest
2009
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Search for Spock
The Motion Picture
Insurrection
Generations
Final Frontier
Into Darkness
Nemesis
Wrath of Khan
Undiscovered Country
First Contact
Beyond
Galaxy Quest
2009
Voyage Home
Search for Spock
The Motion Picture
Insurrection
Generations
Final Frontier
Into Darkness
Nemesis
Just curious if anyone knows this but when they film a season, do they keep around the same background characters throughout the shoot or is it a per episode type of thing? I've noticed a few recurring characters that get a speaking part but for the most part it's just random people you never see again. Anyways I was just wondering,
so I made it to season 7, that was a good two parter, I've noticed the majority of Voyager two part episodes tend to be pretty good except for everything going back to normal at the end.
I'm a little confused on the ending of a Voyager episode. At the end of "Omega Directive" did they just destroy the Omega molecules or did they blow up the Omega molecules and fuck up that alien species nearby subspace? Earlier in the episode they said if subspace was about to be fouled up they would only have ten seconds to escape. As soon as the torpedo detonated they instantly went to warp speed. Was that just a precautionary measure?
Either way, those aliens had a really bad day.
There are "regular extras" that they use and recycle across the series, but the ones that come back are mostly part of the crew IIRC.
They did it in the earlier series quite a bit with recurring extras who spoke, but then just kinda stopped.Ah ok, would be kinda cool to be an extra for an episode or even get a speaking part
So hypothetically, Patrick Stewart didn't renew his contract at the end of Season 6 and left TNG. Jellico from Chain Of Command replaces him, because that was planned to be a thing if Stewart didn't renew his contract.
How different is Season 7? At the minimum, All Good Things... is pretty much thrown out the window.
Tom's love for the early 20th century is kinda funny...you have a room that can create whatever you want and he keeps going back to that time period.
I just watched The Magnificent Seven and started a replay of Red Dead Redemption and it's probably no different. Our desire to romanticize the Wild West would look pretty strange to people who really lived without indoor plumbing or electricity--and law enforcement.
I just watched The Magnificent Seven and started a replay of Red Dead Redemption and it's probably no different. Our desire to romanticize the Wild West would look pretty strange to people who really lived without indoor plumbing or electricity--and law enforcement.
Just curious if anyone knows this but when they film a season, do they keep around the same background characters throughout the shoot or is it a per episode type of thing? I've noticed a few recurring characters that get a speaking part but for the most part it's just random people you never see again. Anyways I was just wondering,
so I made it to season 7, that was a good two parter, I've noticed the majority of Voyager two part episodes tend to be pretty good except for everything going back to normal at the end.
That's one of the things I've liked about a lot of Star Trek's approach to the past, honestly. It's done in a very realistic manner—by which I mean people remember the exciting or fun or adventurous stuff and not the reality. Star Trek IV pokes fun at both how "primitive" we seem to 23rd century explorers, but also how out of their depth those explorers are in the time period as well.
That's why Sisko's complaint about Vic's holoprogram always struck me as weird—yeah, it's modeled after a period of time in which black people were discriminated against, but the whole point of the holodeck is wish fulfillment. Enjoying a sanitized and romanticized version of a period doesn't create any moral quandary.
People give Dear Doctor a lot of shit for character assassination (and they should for the awful moral it is trying to teach) but a Night in Sickbay is about a thousand times worse in that regard. It makes Archer look like a fratboy douche and the most unprofessional person possible.
I think they got stuck trying to make a comedic idea into a more traditional drama and tasked an actor who is pretty damn good at being smug into being one of those dog owners that just becomes a monster whenever it involves their pet.
The ship stranded on it's own thing really lent itself well to a supporting cast, but Voyager never made use of it.
There were a few side characters in S1 and S2 that would show up here and there and talk, but they were forgotten about. Really, the only three supporting characters on the crew were Icheb, Naomi, and Naomi's Mom, and together they only appeared in maybe a dozen episodes.
Isn't that the conclusion The Sisko comes to?
I think Icheb definitely worked out pretty well as a side character. The Borg kids got to add more layers to Seven but Icheb also functioned as an interesting character in his own right. The fact that we learn his parentswas also a really interesting wrinkle.sacrificed him as an anti-Borg weapon
The ship stranded on it's own thing really lent itself well to a supporting cast, but Voyager never made use of it.
There were a few side characters in S1 and S2 that would show up here and there and talk, but they were forgotten about. Really, the only three supporting characters on the crew were Icheb, Naomi, and Naomi's Mom, and together they only appeared in maybe a dozen episodes.
I like this bit a lot but if you think about it....they're like the fourth or fifth group to do this same thing across TNG/DS9/VOY. They think about doing it with Hugh in TNG (and accidentally do by giving him the gift of individuality. Section 31 tries this against the founders. At least three different alien races do it in the Delta Quadrant against the borg.
Yeah, but I think it makes sense. The Borg want your technology and they want you. Effective strategies against them are probably going to funnel into those two categories.
(Also, if you want to get really nitpicky, you could say Janeway did this as well in the finale.)
What was the argument for not eradicating the borg? It's not like they had innocent women and children or something. Everyone is a drone, everyone is assimilating, if you have a chance to wipe them out you do it, I see it like not wanting to eradicating a virus...or plague
I guess not killing Hugh makes sense but they weakened the Borg too much. There have been 3 instances I remember where the borg could have been defeated and luckily weren't because of those pesky humans. In TNG they were this scary race you wanted no part of, by Voyager they were raiding tactical Cubes.
Edit: lol Jerry from parks and rec played a duped merchant
Lmao seven as the doctor, that was hilarious
The two most interesting characters, some japery and a very well acted episode. Not much to not like!
The closest Voyager gets to a gay relationship is that episode.
Seven and the Doctor could have just killed everyone else on the ship and the show would have been none the worse for it.
Seven and the Doctor could have just killed everyone else on the ship and the show would have been none the worse for it.
The episode where they are only ones awake during a "storm" proves you right lol
I'm less than 10 episodes away from finishing, I'm going to miss my star trek binging
You can always watch Babylon 5 (for free on some weird but legal streaming service) if you're in need of more Sci Fi.
I generally like everyone in the cast a lot besides Kim and Chakotay. I even like Chakotay's actor a lot but he gets the worst material pretty much all the time. It's still true though that the show just being Doctor Who with Seven as the companion would have been amazing.
I'm about halfway through Enterprise myself and will probably watch DS9 later in the year. Everytime I watch this show I like it a little bit more, just like Voyager. I think Trip reminding me of George W Bush is what put me off from getting into it when it premiered. I still think the Temporal Cold War stuff should have been its own series. What I keep noticing each time I rewatch it is how much I really like the Vulcans here. They're pretty much always right, just being dicks about it. When they're wrong though, they're wrong as hell. I like how in the fourth season they portray a lot of it being the Romulans dicking around with them as it sort of makes sense.