Look the prequel trilogy is very poorly executed.
I think it's more accurate to say "poorly executed in places." It's not perfect by any means, but there's a lot of good in it, and it's nowhere near as terrible as RLM have tried to make out with their Plinkett hatchet-jobs.
I won't say it's all bad.
SFDebris' making of video essays gave me some new appreciation for all the effort and aims of them, but it still doesn't change the many narrative flaws. (Like the first film having "we must get to coruscant" being the entire driving force of everything... for only the first half and then having a drastic swerve. It would work in a film serial - doesn't work in a movie.)
One argument that seems to have become a point of consensus in the SW thread is the PT would have worked better as a TV mini-series than a trilogy of feature films.
All of the black cats on TOS turned into women.
Makes one start wonder if there was a fetish someone was working out...
Wait a damn minute!
View attachment 2081664
Maybe Spot was another deep-cover Aegis agent like Isis...
Fake News was the word of 2017. The word of 2020 ought to be parasocial.
E-celebs connect with people in a way few people do. Biden doesn't have half of the reach that YT, Twitch, and Insta do. It's very common to see posts and comments like "thank you for helping me in dark times", implying that fans rely on influencers to maintain their mental health.
I'm talking more about people blindly accepting their social lives being curtailed, their business shuttered and their freedoms encroached upon by ever-more intrusive government overreach due to a virus that 99% of its victims survive. I worry that there will not be any end to this, short of violent uprising: governments, as a rule, are about as good at giving up temporary emergency powers as they are at relinquishing temporary emergency sources of revenue.
Harry Potter did a better job with rising fascism, which is a huge indictment of Star Wars.
Maybe in Bizarro World. I can see a lot of parallels between the fall of the Galactic Republic and rise of the Empire in our reality. Rowling's stuff is somewhat less...resonant.
Yeah,
Bowling Alone was literally published in 2000. That's how long this issue of isolation has been discussed.
At the time, Putnam had identified multiculturalism as a major contributing factor to the development of the "bunker mentality" that was involved in the decline of social cohesion in the United States (much to his horror, as a right-thinking, Ivy League-educated liberal). One shudders to imagine how much worse things have gotten since then, what with accelerated third-world immigration, declining social mobility, 9/11 and the grinding futility of the resultant Forever Wars, the COVID "lockdowns," etc, etc.
But hey! At least we can consoom Kenner-style TNG action figures now:
Man, they really dropped the ball on season 7. This and Sub Rosa broke me.
It gets better in Season 8.
I don't recall DS9 coming up in the old TNG movie Plinkett reviews (it's been ages since I watched them last), but Mike's mentioned watching DS9 again in the more recent TNG re:View videos. Seems like the absolute failures of STD and Picard have made him a bit more positive towards it, though I don't think he's ever stated outright hating the show. Maybe in a sense of "this ain't like my TOS," but I never got the sense he actively disliked it.
IIRC, he doesn't like how it presents Roddenberry's futurist utopianism in a more flawed and humanized light.
Art never has anything to do with these decisions. Andromeda was a pastiche of various Roddenberry concepts to bring in Star Trek fans (wasn't the hero named Dylan Hunt, for the hero of Genesis II?), divorced from Star Trek due to rights issues.
Roddenberry must have
really loved that name (to be fair, it
is a pretty cool name for a protagonist), because he used it
again in the 1974 TV movie
Planet Earth, which premiered just a year after
Genesis II.
