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selenak: (Skyisthelimit by Craterdweller)
[profile] aurumcalundula wanted to know what my favourite Star Trek episodes were.

Since it's hard enough to make a favourite episode list for each season of each series, this was a true challenge. But here we go. Caveat: I haven't watched Star Trek: Lower Decks, because the pilot episode turned me off, big time, and I can't watch Star Trek: Prodigy, because it's not available on any streaming service I've booked. So no examples from these. Also: this is not meant as a "best of" list of any of the shows concerned. Just a list of personal favourites.

ST: TOS

Journey to Babel for the family drama, Trouble with Tribbles for the comedy.

ST: TNG
Measure of a Man for the court room drama, Family for the emotions (both the Picard and the Worf's parents subplots, in different ways), Deja Q(for the comedy and the Q-ness), Face of the Enemy (excellent spy drama, Marina Sirtis gets to be awesome) and All Good Things... (still best ST series finale ever, with everyone in the ensemble given a chance to shine, and it shows the character developments between pilot and series finale beautifully)

ST: DS9

In the Pale Moonlight as she series' shades of grey embodied (and not just by Garak's skin), positively the most Le Carré like ST episode ever made, Civil Defense for the comedy and the ensemble-ness (also one of the few episodes to have both Garak and Dukat at the same time), Blood Oath (Jadzia and the Three Original Klingons for the win), House of Quark (Quark vs the Klingon High Council is still one of my favourite ST scenes ever, also, it's the first episode where Quark and Rom have a sibling like relationship), Trials and Tribble-Ations (because sometimes lightning does strike twice, and this is also one of best comedy ST eps ever and a love declaration to TOS), The Wire (Garak/Bashir 4eva!).

ST: VOY

Someone to Watch Over Me (for both Seven and the Doctor), Jetrel (aka yes, you can use Neelix as a serious character and do an ST version of Robert Oppenheimer), Bride of Chaotica (best Voyager Holodeck episode, Kate Mulgrew has way too much fun), Survival Instinct (aka the lone Ron Moore episode, and it's one of the best for Seven of Nine), Body and Soul (see above re: Seven and the Doctor)

ST: ENT

The Forge, Awakening and Kirshara, aka the Garfield-Stevenses write Enterprise's Vulcans into three dimensionalilty, include a good Shran guest appearance, and are offering an excellent adventure to boot.

ST: DISCO

Magic makes the sanest man go mad (excellent use of time loop, Tilly is hilarious, Michael is awesome, and so is Stamets) , Despite Yourself (Disco shows the old Mirror Universe has a very new and refreshing life in it), If Memory Serves (Michael & Spock join my ranks of favourite messed up siblings, Pike's great, Vina gets to speak for herself), The Hope that is You (1) and Far From Home (almost a second pilot two parter, establishes both Michael Burnham and the Discovery crew in a new context, and does a great job of it).

The other days
selenak: Siblings (Michael and Spock)
[community profile] startrekholidays is open, and I received a beautiful gift, featuring the T'Pol-mentors-a-growing-up Spock story of my dreams:

Teatime Stories (5757 words) by Anonymous
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Star Trek: The Original Series, Star Trek: The Animated Series, Star Trek: Discovery, Star Trek: Enterprise
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Characters: Spock (Star Trek), T'Pol (Star Trek)
Additional Tags: Friendship, Tea
Summary:

When Spock needs a friend, T'Pol is there.



Regarding the other galactic franchise, it'll be a while till I'll get to see the new Star Wars. This is not due to any issues on my part, but simply because the one SW era I'm passionate about are the Prequels and The Clone Wars series, and also I'm back at the APs for the holidays, where I rarely get the chance to visit the cinema. Considering that the Rise of Skywalker is bound to play for a good while to come, I'm waiting till I'm back in Munich for that one, I figure.
selenak: (Vulcan)
Day 19 - Favorite Enterprise Episode

If I'm allowed to cheat, I'll go with the three parter from s4, "The Forge", "Awakening" and "Kir'Shara". If it has to be only one of those, I'm going with "Kir'Shara". Aside from being suspenseful with good roles for both the Enterprise regulars and the guest stars (which include Shran being reliably excellent in "Kir'Shara", Soval suddenly being three dimensional instead of "stuffy Vulcan annoying Archer", and newly introduced a young version of T'Pau, last seen hosting Spock's aborted wedding in Amok Time, as a female Vulcan Martin Luther), said three episodes manage to both make sense of the previous Enterprise characterisation of Vulcans and bring it in line with the TOS and onwards characterisation. (It pays that the Garfield-Stevenses, who wrote The Forge, previously wrote many a TOS novel with prominent roles for Vulcan characters.)

What's more, it also improves on something which highly irritated me about the Xindi arc in the previous season. By which I mean that wereas the Xindi arc (a very blatant way of dealing with 9/11 in fiction) started by Earth attacked out of the blue by a previously unknown race (who, as it turned out, themselves were manipulated into doing it) , and our heroes deciding that the Jack Bauer way of morality was the way to go, the Vulcan trilogy had the Vulcan High Command dominated by a guy who claimed that the Andorians were in possession of a weapon of mass destruction and that totally asked for a preemptive strike at Andoria. Rather satisfyingly, it ended with the guy in question being deposed and Vulcan society undergoing a moral reformation. But then, it was clearly fiction.

The Other Days )
selenak: (Discovery)
In which the most insane plan since Archer thought evolution was destiny is executed on a Star Trek show.

Read more... )
selenak: (Vulcan)
What about The Inner Light was a multi-voiced cry after not finding it on my list of favourite Picard-centric episodes. Not surprisingly, given it frequently ends up on a lot of people’s Best Of Trek episodes, and Patrick Stewart is indeed excellent in it.

Now, I like The Inner Light. I’m a sucker for quiet character episodes, and I do like the basic concept which is spoilery. Discusions of this and what does stop me going from like to love, along with ethical problems and less serious speculation on what other space captains would have done ensue, containing spoilers for Discovery )
selenak: (Vulcan)
Last week I noticed that several of our major news media - the FAZ and the SZ, who are our equivalent to the Washington Post and the New York Times, basically - did major stories about the My Lai Massacre, due to the anniversary. Whereas I didn't see anything in my admittedly limited look at the US media, and feel free to correct me if I'm wrong, it's entirely possible that I missed several articles.

Now, given all that's happening in the US in the present, I'm aware there's no lack of stories about current day calamities. However, I couldn't help but feel reminded of something someone in my circle observed a while ago: the sense that the Vietnam War, which used to be very present in (American as well as non-American) pop culture when I grew up in the 80s, seems to have all but disappeared. And I can't help but speculate, and connect it with a couple of things. 9/11 being one of them. (Which reminds me: the NY Times last week also had an enraged opinion piece by an Iraqui writer on it being the 15th anniversary of W's invasion of Iraq. Someone in the comments observed on the depressing fact that according to current day polls, a lot of US citizens seem to think Saddam had something to do with 9/11. This despite the fact this was one lie too big even for Dubya and his neocons, who stuck to non-existent weapons of mass destruction back in the day. It's not like Saddam is lacking in villainous deeds to be blamed for, but not this one.) And because in recent weeks I finished my Star Trek: Enterprise marathon, my brain made some weird connections, to wit:

1) The Xindi arc in s3 of ENT was an obvious attempt to grapple with 9/11 in fiction. (And the result was, err, less than stellar storytelling.) S4 offered something a bit more nuanced in the form of the the Vulcan three parter. By which I mean that wereas the Xindi arc started by Earth attacked out of the blue by a previously unknown race (who, as it turned out, themselves were manipulated into doing it) , and our heroes deciding that the Jack Bauer way of morality was the way to go, the Vulcan trilogy, written by the Garfield-Stevenses of many a TOS novel fame, had the Vulcans Command dominated by a guy who clamed that the Andorians were in possession of a weapon of mass destruction and that totally asked for a preemptive strike at Andoria. Rather satisfyingly, it ended with the guy in question being deposed and Vulcan society undergoing a moral reformation. But then, it was clearly fiction.

2.) Another attempt to deal with the emotional impact of 9/11 by then ongoing genre shows that I can recall were, of course, the rebooted Battlestar Galactica (the scene of the pilots touching the photos of people who died during the Cylon attack on the colonies was meant as a direct evocation, for example).

3.) And then there was the (in)famous review of the newly released The Two Towers in TIME Magazine by Richard Schickel which read the movie as basically Saruman = Osama bin Laden, Aragorn's speech to Theoden = directed at nations unwilling to back the US in its Iraq venture, which enraged Viggo Mortensen to no end. (He wrote a letter of protest to TIME and showed up in every public appearance he had to promote the movie wearing a T-Shirt saying "no blood for oil".)

What all these attempts and interpretations have in common is this: in all of them, the society coded as "us" (as in "the US") is the attacked-by-overwhelming-forces plucky little guy. I mean, technically you couild argue the humans of the twelve colonies on BSG outnumbered the invading Cylons, but the Cylons, at least at this early point in the show, were presented as technically superior and as the relentless hunters whereas the humans were on the run and fleeing, definitely outmached in weaponry. Not a single one of them has the society/group the audience is supposed to identify with as a superpower outmatching their attackers in weaponry, numbers and economic strength. And most definitely not as a superpower with a history of invasions of its own.

Partly I suppose this is because everyone wants to see themselves as the little guy, the plucky rebel/victim of injustice, and not as The Man defending the status quo. But part of it... well, this brings me back to where I started, the My Lai Massacre and all it symbolizes, the Vietnam War. Because my current interpretation is this: the story the Vietnam War told for a while, in the 70s and 80s, was unbearable post 9/11. It amounted to: the US fought a war which not only it did not win but lost both in the moral and the pragmatic sense. None of the aims it set out to achieve was in fact achieved; the end result was Vietnam as a Communist state. In the process, the image of "defender of the free" etc. was torn to shreds; instead of GI's storming the Beach of Normandy, the enduring iconic image was of a naked little girl running because she got bombed with Napalm, instead of flags being put into the sand of Iwo Jima, you got "we had to destroy the village in order to save it" as a summary of US military strategy, between Johnson and Nixon, both parties in a two party system were tainted by leading this war (and lying about it to the public). It was all for worse than nothing. The US soldiers killed for nothing and were killed for nothing. They got addicted to drugs and committed massacres for nothing. Now you can do the Rambo thing and get a still pleasing to to conservatives story of a brave soldier/brave soldiers let down by their government during and after the war in question, yet good by themselves. You can try the "a few rotten apples" explanation for the likes of My Lai. But by and large, you're still left with: the war was lost on every level it could be lost, and nothing good, no grand final justification came out of it. And that's just completely alien to the narrative US Americans are taught about themselves.

Mind you: there's a sci fi saga created at the time in which the narrative "we" and "us" are in fact a superpower, involved in a conflict with what appears to be an inferior foe under false pretenses, a republic which is rotting from within though there are also people in it who do live according to their ideals. A story with heroes who make moral compromises which end up making everything worse, not better, and with a central character who might start out as an innocent thinking the task of his chosen profession is to free people but who ends up committing massacres....why yes, I'm thinking of the Star Wars Prequels. Which have their flaws, sure enough. But in this, they have a bit more narrative honesty than all those other reflections. (Also more than the sequels who avoid the inconvenience of having to depict main characters defending a functioning state and the status quo by destroying the new Republic off screen and presenting its heroes in a brand new rebellion against a superior foe.)

And since I'm ending on a Star Wars note anyway: my favourite WIP has been finished as of last week. I've reccommended it here before, despite usually avoiding WiPs, because it's that good an AU, encompassing Prequel and OT era alike. It uses its time travel element at the start not as a cheat but as a great way to explore the characters, because Vader regretting Padmé's death and his own physical state and wanting to change this isn't the same as Anakin being redeemed, the way Anakin later, at a point when he thinks he's escaped his past, gets confronted with what he did in both the original and the altered time line is enough to satisfy the strictest critic, Leia-as-raised-by-Anakin-and-Padmé is both intriguingly different and yet recognizably herself and has a heartrendering, fantastic arc once she finds out about certain things, Luke is the most humane character as he should be, there's Ahsoka to make my fannish heart happy, and while I'm usually not really into the EU bookverse characters, the way this story uses Mara Jade is awesome. (Especially an angle which the novels she hails from to my knowledge didn't consider, to wit, that she and Anakin share the experience of being groomed by Palpatine from childhood onward.) In conclusion: it's a long tale, but so worth it.


Out of the Dark Valley (324646 words) by irhinoceri
Chapters: 53/53
Fandom: Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith, Star Wars: Rebellion Era - All Media Types, Star Wars: Rise of Empire Era - All Media Types, Star Wars - All Media Types
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: Graphic Depictions Of Violence
Relationships: Padmé Amidala/Anakin Skywalker, Mara Jade/Luke Skywalker, Leia Organa & Luke Skywalker
Characters: Anakin Skywalker | Darth Vader, Obi-Wan Kenobi, Padmé Amidala, Luke Skywalker, Leia Organa, Ahsoka Tano, Mara Jade, Original Female Character(s), Han Solo, Sheev Palpatine | Darth Sidious, Barriss Offee, Yoda (Star Wars)
Additional Tags: Skywalker Family Feels, Alternate Universe - Time Travel, Alternate Universe - Canon Divergence, Padmé lives!, minor ahsoka tano/barriss offee, Canon-Typical Violence, Time Travel Fix-It, Time Travel Fuck-It-Up-Again, Family Drama/Angst, Dysfunctional Family, Ensemble Cast
Summary:

15 years after the events of RotS, Darth Vader discovers a way to time travel backwards through the Force, to the moment in his past he most regrets. This creates an alternate timeline where he has the opportunity to change his and Padmé's tragic fate. But reliving the past and making a new future will prove to be no easy task, and the sins of the father will have lasting effects on the next generation. (AU from Mustafar onward. Ensemble PoV featuring Anakin, Padmé, Obi-Wan, Luke, Leia, and Mara Jade. Skywalker family focus with mild Anidala and LukeMara elements. Background Barrissoka. Rated T for violence and dark themes.)

selenak: (Live long and prosper by elf of doriath)
How other famous fictional detectives would have solved the murder of Laura Palmer All versions are witty, but the Philip Marlowe and the Phryne Fisher one cracked me up especially. Though I note with disapproval that wihile Poirot is represented, Miss Marple is not. Clearly, the Log Lady would have told her everything she needed to know on the first day. :)

Speaking of Twin Peaks, at first I had no intention of watching The Return, because I didn't feel a sequel was necessary, but then [profile] abigail_n's favorable review made me curious, so I marathoned it. And... I can see all her points, but my own impression was far more negative. Not least because there were elements in it which to me felt gratitiously spiteful, such as the fate of Audrey Horne, or disturbing in an unintended way (there's also plenty of deliberately disturbing, but that's a given with Twin Peaks), to wit, things like Janey-E blissfully declaring something spoilery ). But also because while the original Twin Peaks was not short of female suffering (I mean, the premise alone...), it had a lot of female pov characters as well (Donna, Audrey, Josie, Norma, Shelley). Twin Peaks: The Return, otoh, feels relentlessly male pov to me, and that in combination with the sheer number of abused female characters was very off-putting.

All this being said: Lynch's visual imagination is as good as ever, and I don't regret having watched it, not least for the incredible tenderness of the conversations between Hawke and Margaret, aka the Log Lady, which were filmed while the actress was dying. Oh, and given it's David Lynch, I should have known he'd cast Laura Dern as Diane. It's now impossible to imagine anyone else in that role, and as the recipient of all those tapes.

I've also continued my Star Trek: Enterprise watching to the point where the infamous post-9/11 narrative shift happens, and great maker, as Londo Mollari would say, is it ever immediately noticable. So that feels as good a point as any to look back at the first two seasons with a couple of observations.

1.) At its best, the show uses its early space flight/no Federation yet setting quite well, and certainly does a better job than Voyager did recalling its ship and crew don't have the Starfleet resources for repairs and restocking at their disposal whenever they need them. The episode when Enterprise has to undergo repairs at a fully automated alien station also struck a good balance between satire (for those of us in need of repairs and unable to talk to a human being, going from automated message to automated message instead) and suspense (the reveal about the extra price may have been a tad predictable, but it worked). Also, I appreciate that through the first two seasons there are repeated scenes where our heroes marvel at some space phenomenon in joy and awe - as explorers who'd never been in deep space before and had not seen pictures would.

2.) Otoh, when the show does the genre- and franchise immanent tropes, it rarely if ever rises above formula. This is where the comparison to Star Trek: Discovery is most striking to me. Discovery also does tropes, but delivers them with original twists. When Enterprise does Episode With Alien Princess And Male Starfleet Officer, it follows the same beats we've seen on TOS, on TNG. When it does "Enemy Mine" (another Trip episode), it does so by the letter. It's not that the result is objectionable (I like "Enemy Mine" stories! I do! And the alien pilot here can act better through his latex than Padma Lakshmi without any in the Princess episode), it's that there is no particular twist unique to this particular show in it. (Meanwhile, TNG gave us Darmok, which for my money is still the best ST twist on this particular tale, and not just because Patrick Stewart gets to tell the tale of Gilgamesh.) Whereas, when Discovery does a time loop episode, it does so in a way that's different from the TNG version, or for that matter the Xena and Buffy versions, furthers the relationships between regulars (Michael Burnham & Paul Stamets, Michael Burnham & Ash Tyler) and expands everyone's characterisations (plus the way our heroine forces the antagonist of the episode to reset the loop one more time is both inventive and outstandingly brave).

3.) Back when I had watched the fourth season without having watched more than the first three episodes of the first or any other season, I said that I found Malcolm Reed and Travis Mayweather bland as characters, without defining characterisation. Which I take back now; in the first two seasons, they get ample characterisation unique to them. Hoshi so far had to do more in s1 than in s2, and I do wish they'd have given her more scenes with T'Pol, because the few they get are always very interesting.

4.) At least two of the episodes are outstanding examples of HOW NOT TO WRITE MORAL DILEMMA EPISODES. Good lord, Berman & Braga. I haven't seen such tone deaf examples of "episode thinks it tells one story while actually coming across as telling something completely different" since TNG's The Outcast (aka the one where the writers' idea had been to do a sympathetic allegory about homosexuality while the result, not least due to the casting of the supposedly androgynous species by solely female actors, came across as Riker versus the planet of the intolerant lesbians). What I'm referring to: "Dear Doctor" in season 1, and "The Congenitor" in season 2. "The Congenitor" irritated me more because for the most part, I thought it worked quite well until we came to the denouement. It was a painful joy to see Andreas "G'Kar" Katsulas again, and his parts of the episode were one of those "space exploration is amazing!" scenes Enterprise, when it wants, does in a heartfelt way. I also before the denouement thought that the presentation of the aliens as both technologically advanced, friendly and, as was revealed through the episode, doing something spoilery that goes to the core of the ep ) But this is not what this episode does. It claims this is about cultural differences, and Trip having made the mistake of trying to impose his values on a culture he knows next to nothing about. And nobody, at any point, calls it the spoilerly thing it really is about. )

4a)Otoh, Stigma, aka the AIDS episode, to me was a good "sci fi take on a contemporary problem" episode, without any moral smugness and instead an earnest and intense "look in the mirror" subtext. The episode choosing to focus on medical research being slow as long as the illness is regarded as a problem for a minority the majority feels itself entitled to disdain morally, and the hypocrisy of differentiating between "good victims" and "bad victims" (depending on how they got infected) was particular on point for those of us who remember the 80s.

5.) Oh good lord, the bio gel really is as awkwardly fanservice-y as the introduction episodes made it look. I think the most awkward (and very, very American) thing about it is that T'Pol, who ends up in these scenes more often than the rest of the gang, always keeps her underwear on. Look, writers, if it's for de-contamination, you have to put the stuff on your entire skin, surely? *Note to self: don't go off on a tangent about how to do Sauna again*
selenak: (Porthos by Chatona)
Fine, universe. I give in. No longer am I Team Spot; I've switched to Team Porthos. Sorry, Data, I still love your poem to your cat, but the beagle won me over re: most favourite ST pet. (Livingstone the fish was never in the running.) And I'm not even a dog person, I usually always prefer cats. But did Spot get a whole episode centred on its well being? Spot did not. 'Twas the big eyes that did me in. And now I have to retrospectively angst about Scotty, the bastard, and what he did to Porthos in the Rebootverse! (I mean, given dog life spans, chances are this was a Porthos descendant rather than Porthos Prime, but you know, a transporter accident, and Porthos (Prime?) never seen again, this makes me worried. Because precedent.

...incidentally, I wonder whether we'll ever see Merkin the Tribble again on Discovery?
selenak: (Sternennacht - Lefaym)
Day 3 - Who is your least favorite character?
At first I t hought: I don't have one, in any of the series/movies. Then I reconsidered. But let's define what I mean by "least favorite" first. The criteria isn't "being a villain"; there are some villains I'm very fond of indeed for, well, reasons (Kai Winn, you manipulative scheming Renaissance Pope in space, let me introduce you to Rodrigo Borgia!), while I entirely see the damage they do. There are also villains I feel the requesite "boo-hiss" impulse for, and villains I find boring but not an issue otherwise. I'm also not talking about liking one of the heroes just a bit less than the others. However, both with heroes and villains there are characters who just grate you the wrong way, both by themselves and by what they're doing to the larger narrative. And those are the kinds I'm listing now. Again, separately for each incarnation.

TOS/ TOS Movies: Sybok (from Star Trek: The Final Frontier, for those of you lucky enough to not have watched it). Giving Spock an unexpected!half brother this late in the game was always going to be tricky and would have been very hard to pull off well or at least satisfyingly. Making that half brother essentially a Californian guru putting everyone in touch with their feelings while seeking god was a disaster. (Every now and then, I wonder whether some in the script writing department wanted to do an early satire on Scientology and Ron Hubbard, but given Sybok dies heroically, I don't think so.) And that's before we get to the retcon of Vulcans in general (Sybok's mother was "a Vulcan princess"? What the hell? Amanda gives birth in a cave instead of a hospital?) and Spock's family in particular. No wonder that, novels aside, Sybok was never mentioned again.

TNG: Another guy from the movies: Shinzon from Star Trek: Nemesis. (Not for nothing was this the last of the TNG movies.) He's played by a young Tom Hardy who isn't to blame for the overall disaster, I hasten to add. Also, as opposed to the unexpected!half brother for Spock, the basic concept of making the antagonist Picard's clone so Picard gets to fight a younger version of himself isn't doomed for failure from the get go. It's not original, but ST did the doppelganger antagonist concept often and sometimes very well. Hardy doesn't come across as very Patrick-Stewart-y, but Shinzon's growing up is so radically different from Picard's that you can blame this on nurture versus nature. (Though it makes the clone concept kind of pointless; usually you do doppelganger villains to confront the heroes with their flaws and dark sides, and for that to work there needs to be some resemblance.) No, the big problem with Shinzon is two fold: a) he's connected to a horrible, late in the hour retcon about the Romulans. The hole idea of the unexpected!Remans as a Nosferatu looking slave race staging a revolt not even led by a Reman but an evil white savior is just...someone should have said "back to the drawing board" very early in the development. And b) Other than leading a take-over of Romulus (because getting one planet = a successful coup against an empire), Shinzon's main way of expressing his villainy in order to make the audience hate him is by mentally raping Troi. Boo, hiss, alright, but against the writers and producers for resorting to the laziest of all props to signal "villain". In short, Shinzon is far from the only thing wrong about Nemesis, but he embodies a lot of it, and thus he gets to be on this post's list.

DS9: The Prophets. Which will surprise no one who's been reading my DS9 ramblings for longer than five minutes. To recapitulate: my biggest problem with the Prophets isn't that they're super powerful aliens who are occasionally used as (literally) dei ex machina, and I like the explorations of what faith means in, say, the episode where Odo is dealing with the deserter version of Weyou who worships him as a god (as all the Vorta are genetically programmed to do), and Kira points out that she feels this way about the Prophets. No, my problem is that in the later seasons of DS9, as opposed to the early ones when they were still very sparingly used and unscrutable, we're supposed to take the Prophets as good. (And in a battle with the Pagh Wraiths as evil.) This despite the fact the later seasons also introduce the big retcon about Sisko's origins which makes the Prophets into rapists, and never acknowledges there's a problem there. The whole "Prophets versus Pagh Wraiths" subplot is my least favourite later season plot line, full stop, and my least favourite part about the finale. (Leaving completely aside that at the time of broadcast, the comparison to Babylon 5's Shadows versus Vorlons and the way this had been solved by Sheridan & Co. rejecting both for the unscrupulous way they used the younger races, was inevitable.) In short: the Prophets make me grind my teeth in the worst way. Ill thought out and executed characters tend to do that.


Voyager: Chakotay. I'm sorry, Chakotay fans! Most of the time, it's Beltan's one-expression performance, some of the time, it's that I don't get why all the interesting women (Torres and Seska in the earliest seasons, Janeway throughout and Seven in the finale) are into him. But as opposed to all the other examples, it probably comes down to an entirely irrational "he just rubs me the wrong way".

Enterprise: well, one reason why I stopped watching early on (and then years later [personal profile] bimo persuaded me to watch the fourth season, which turned out indeed to be enjoyable) was Captain Jonathan Archer. Not just the wooden performance. ENT was the ST show which was influenced by 9/11 in the worst way, and Archer's resulting atttitude wasn't what I want from my Starfleet Captains. But really, the best thing about Archer was his dog (and thus I loved the beagle gag in Reboot!Star Trek), and otherwise he was immensely forgettable to me, which is a problem when it's the leading man. I don't have to like the Captains best to enjoy an incarnation of Star Trek; in fact, Picard aside, I usually don't. But I have to find them interesting. (Which I do in all other cases.) If the show doesn't manage to give me that, well, then the character is a problem for me.

Reboot Star Trek: don't have one, really. I have some conceptual problems (to put it mildly in the second case), but I do like the entire reboot ensemble. As far as the villains go, they suffer from Khan Wannabeness (yes, the guy from the first movie, too, because sadly the enduring legacy from ST: Wrath of Khan was to give all subsequent scriptwriters a "we must come up with a Khan like villain" complex), and Marcus is your standard evil Admiral, but they don't make me want to tear my hair out the way Sybok and Shinzon do. So: no candidate here.



The other days )
selenak: (Live long and prosper by elf of doriath)
Day 26 - OMG WTF? Season finale

Star Trek: Enterprise, season 4: These are the voyages... comes immediately to mind.

Some background first: I had watched the first few Enterprise episodes when they were broadcast and then decided the show wasn't really for me. Not that it was staggeringly incompetent or something like that, but it came at the tail end of the production team having more or less written Star Trek in various variations for sixteen years, and it showed. Especially since Enterprise had the bad luck to come at a time where there were several other good sci fi shows around. Give it a rest for a while, thought I, meaning both myself and anyone producing Star Trek. The fact that fannish rumour told me subsequent seasons reflect 9/11 happening and Star Trek suddenly going all gung ho (and not in a self critical way, unlike, say, the relevant DS9 episodes where Sisko & team are confronted what the Dominion threat has made of them and Starfleet at large) didn't encourage me to tune in again.

However, the show did have its champions. And I often have a soft spot for the fannish underdog. (By which I don't mean the in-story underdog, I mean those characters unpopular by fandom at large.) So when I began to hear, from [personal profile] bimo and others, that Enterprise offered some genuinenly good stuff, like fleshing out the Andorians the way TOS had done the Vulcans, TNG had done the Klingons and DS9 had done the Cardassians, Bajorans and Ferengi, that the fourth season in particular was eminently watchable, other than the finale, which everyone hated (including, as I heard at FedCon from Jolene Blaylock, the actors), I thought, come on, why not? So I watched the fourth season, which I was assured I could do without having watched the previous ones, and didn't regret it. But boy, could I ever see what the complaints about the finale (which wasn't just the season but the series finale) had been about. I didn't hate it, I just thought it was the most misguided idea ever for a series finale. If it had been a mid season inter-Trek crossover episode (which TNG, DS9 and Voy had all done), it would have been not stellar, but okay.

Here are the spoilery reasons why as a FINALE, it is my choice for the WTF? category above all other candidates )
selenak: (rootbeer)
I've finished the fourth season of Enterprise.

Spoilery Thoughts )

So, Enterprise, of which I now know one entire season and three episodes of another. Previously, I was inclined to think they should have given the franchise a rest after Voyager already. Now, I don't regret they made another any more; I did like most of what I saw. But I still see the problems, especially in comparison to the Sci-Fi shows with which Enterprise shared the screeen those four years. Firefly, BSG and Farscape all had an ensemble of roughly similar size, but the characters were very distinctive from the start. On Enterprise, I have no idea about what Merryweather (spelling?) is like, I know more about Mirrorverse Sato than I know about the real thing (though I liked her - she just didn't get much to do), and other than the proto-Section 31 membership, I don't know much about Reed, his likes and dislikes and personality, either. Which leaves Phlox, Archer, Trip and T'Pol, and out of these, the lead, Archer, feels the most generic. The fact that he's the leading man and thus doomed to certain general leading man characteristics is no excuse. Mal Reynolds, John Crichton and William Adama are the leading men of their respective shows as well, and are very different from each other, despite the general hero characteristics.

Meaning: I can see why it got cancelled. It galls that this happened after a season where the writing was mostly good and so were the performances, a season which could have lead to those weaknesses getting improved upon subsequently. But I still can't morn the premature demise of Enterprise as intensely as the cancellation of Firefly or Farscape, because the affection it was able to evoke just wasn't as thorough, for the above named reasons.

I'll look for fanfic, though. And will now go back to writing my Multiverse assignments.
selenak: (Charles - anneline)
Firstly, yesterday I learned that Patrick Stewart, who turns 65 today, and Ian McKellan are going to play Prospero and Lear respectively in the Royal Shakespeare Company's 2006 season. I don't care how, but I must make it to Stratford next year.

Secondly, I watched more Enterprise, and must say that all of you who told me season 4 was good really haven't exaggarated. It's no DS9, but it's an enjoyable space show, and I would have liked for it to continue. Again, there were several things for an old Trekker to squee about, and thankfully it seems the Augments had been the last instance where a group was depicted as uniformely the same. Be it Romulans, Klingons or the Mirror equivalents of our own gang, there was no more follow the leader unquestioningly nonsense.

Interstellar intrigue and mirror universes, oh, my )

Only a few more episodes let, and now I'm sorry for it. I've grown fond of the gang.

****

Today is also a good day for a multifandom girl like me. [livejournal.com profile] hobsonphile posted our list of Signs You Are A Centauriphile; all Babylon 5 watchers, please take note. [livejournal.com profile] honorh, proving that badgering your friends is a perfectly legitimate tactic, posted the Star Wars Fashion Critique from her evil alter ego I had been begging for persistently. And [livejournal.com profile] kangeiko wrote another superb story, an Alias one, set post-season 4: "Tale of the Dead Princess".

****

Lastly, returning to Patrick Stewart: just a few reasons why he's so worth gushing over. He can play villains (Sejanus in I, Claudius, for example) as easily as men of conscience (Picard and Charles Xavier, obviously), hardened obsessives (Ahab in Moby Dick) as easily as men falling apart (The Masterbuilder, an Ibsen play I and [livejournal.com profile] kathyh) saw him in. He is one of the few actors who can make the act of listening as interesting as a close-up of them when they're talking; you always get the impression there is something going on behind the eyes. He can do stoic, he can emote like no-one's business. (Not coincidentally, the episode which made me fall for Picard was Sarek in which our Captain gets to channel Sarek's and his own long surpressed emotions for a scene; what makes this so powerful, more so than if it had been, say, Kirk or Sisko who are both openly emotional types is that you know how tight a reign Picard usually keeps on himself.) And last but certainly not least, he has a divine voice. May the public benefit from it for many years more!
selenak: (Book - Inlovewithnight)
One of the great things about fandom is that more often than not, when feeling really enthusiastic about something, one not only feels compelled to share the joy of the shiny but actually manages to do so. Showing Firefly to [livejournal.com profile] thalia_seawood and Battlestar Galactica to a non-lj aquaintance of mine in the last ten days and watching them fall for it the way I did was wonderful. (On a sidenote, it occurs to me that I seem to have a parallel thing going on with space shows. I loved Babylon 5 and DS9 pretty much simultanously when they were originally broadcast - still do now, a decade later - and now love Firefly and the new BSG simultanously. What I really don't understand is this ridiculous either/or thing - the idea that if you are a fan of one, you cannot be in love with the other.)

Watching Firefly again reminded me that I still don't have favourites there. Which is a rare thing. Not the falling in love with the entire ensemble part - I mean, if I really fall for a show, I usually like if not all of the characters then most of them - but usually there is also one character, or there are two, whom I love just a little bit more. (I.e. Londo Mollari for Babylon 5, Max Eilerson for Crusade, Laura Roslin for BSG, Arvin Sloane for Alias, Buffy Summes for BTVS, etc.) Not so in the case of Firefly, where it's really all equal opportunity affection. Maybe if the show hadn't been cancelled, that would have changed. Or maybe the Big Damn Movie will change it. Then again, maybe not. Maybe this is really my big equal opportunity fandom. The other pecularity I have about Firefly is that I consciously stay away from 'shipper stories. (Those rare stories about Wash and Zoe excepted, because they are The Cutest Married Couple Ever.) Doesn't matter which 'ship, canon or subtext, het or slash, but I really avoid them. Maybe that has to do with the equal opportunity ensemble love?

Speaking of space shows, I just watched three more season 4 Enterprise stories, and for the first time found myself squeeing in delight. The three episodes in question were written by that, no pun intended, enterprising couple, the Garfield-Stevenses, who wrote one of my favourite ST novels, Federation. (They also ghost wrote William Shatner's return-of-Kirk series, but as I'm not a Kirk fan, I stayed away from it.) In short, they're fans who went from licensed fanfic to actual episodes, and it showed, in the best sense. The Awakening is one big continuity orgy for Trekkers (SEHLATS!), and awoke, again no pun intended, all kinds of fuzzy nostalgic feelings in me. But there are reasons why a complete newbie could love those three episodes as well. Spoilery Ones. )

These are the first episodes which made me want to read fanfic. Sehlats in same are optional.

****
The beta'd version of my Alias story " Secret Keepers " is up.
selenak: (Sleer)
The Munich Film Festival is always fun to attend, only this year I have limited time. Still, films I've seen:

Child Star: Manages to be witty and unsentimental. Jennifer Jason Leigh as the mother could have been a caricature but never is, and usually gets the best lines. The kid isn't either over the top brattish (just brattish, in places) nor sweet. Bonus points for "First Son", the film they're shooting in this film, and which sounds like either a brilliant satire of the genre or, sadly, something Hollywood just might do next.

"Der Vater meiner Schwester": aka, Daddy issues aren't just for American tv. This German variation of same manages to be astonishingly sans heavy-handedness, given the subject. Boy finds out his supposedly dead father is very much alive and living the rich and stable family life with another legitimate family, boy makes friends with unknown sister and allows her to fall in love with him in order to force father to admit his existence. As opposed to classical drama, no one dies or goes mad over this. Some of the actors could have been better, but it was okay.

Shampoo Javaid: Pakistani film set in Lahore, witty, with the twist at the end well-prepared, and the society chit-chat with occasionally disturbing asides reminded me of a comedy of manners. The fluent and constant switch between English and Urdu in conversation makes as much a point about Pakistan as the arguments between the characters.

Re-Inventing the Taliban: also a Pakistani film, much darker, by a female director, Sharmeen Obaid. Documenting the rise of Islam fundamentalism in her country, especially in the poor Northwest regions on the border to Afghanistan, she makes you feel well and truly chilled as we see advertisments on billboards with the faces of the women blackened or torn out, or in her interviews with MMA (= the coalition of religious parties in Pakistan who went from 2 % nationally to twenty in the last election) officials. Asked about the activities of the MMA youth after the later has burned down a circus, the official she talks to benignly smiles and says: "Let me put it this way. If I told you I wanted to slap you right now, why would I want that?" Slowly, and disbelievingly, she replies: "Because I have done something in appropriate?" "Yes," he says, continuing to smile. "You acted inappropriately. And so did they. First, you threaten a slap, and I am sure our youth has done so, but when they don't listen, well..."
Equally disturbing is her interview with a female MMA official who had her head completely covered, only the eyes free, and who insists that yes, coeducation is bad, women should not work together with men, there are enough jobs where this does not have to be, women should have their own parliament, the MMA wanted to restore female honour etc.
Sharmeen Obaid also documents the other side: the actresses, singers and models who have no intention of giving up their rights but yes, are worried that there might be a Talibanization coming soon. Very worth watching, very disturbing. Small but frustrating and ominous detail she points out: even at a protest assembly in the Northeast, with the protest being against the edict forbidding non-religious singing and music, she was the only female attendant...

***

I've watched the season 4 of Enterprise three-parter with Brent Spiner. Spoilers )

***

A Harry Potter recommendation: "Grieving Process" , a gen story about Harry and Remus after Sirius' death. It feels immensly real, and I loved reading it.

And I've written another Alias challenge response, Irina this time, in her KGB days.
selenak: (rootbeer)
Watched more Dr. Who, and more Enterprise. Regarding the later, hear Selena sound more approving )

As far as Dr. Who episodes go, I watched until and including "Dalek" before I had to break it off. Loved them. Details, Details )
selenak: (Galactica - Kathyh)
So, thanks to [livejournal.com profile] cavendish I've started with the fourth season of Enterprise, and thanks to [livejournal.com profile] kernezelda I started with the new Dr. Who.

Unfortunately, the first Enterprise ep of season 4 managed to hit one of my pet peeves in Sci-Fi and Fantasy.

Hear Selena Rant )

The first Dr. Who episode, however, turned out to be delightul. A brief summary of my Whovian knowledge: saw two Tom Bakers (nice), one Colin Baker (dreadful), two Sylvester McCoys (intriguing; loved Ace), and the dreadful movie with Paul McGann (boo, hiss! Not at Paul McGann, at the script) . So I am neither an expert nor a total ignoramus.

Dr.Who? )

Now I'm eager to watch more of the Doctor, and will fight against my pet peeve in the Enterprise case, for hopefully that scenario will soon be done with and never appear again. In the meantime, fanfic for other stuff.

BSG: [livejournal.com profile] jennyo it seems has discovered Battlestar Galactica and wrote "The World Can Wait", a good story about Laura Roslin and Lee during Colonial Day.

Alias: And my dear Andraste wrote "Edge of Darkness", an excellent take on what those First Generation Spies were up to during seasons 2 and 3. Sloane, Jack and Irina in dark times. I love it.

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