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Star Trek requires a very specific performance genre

By Drew Dietsch | publishing

Modern Star Trek is no longer interested in me. I’ve talked about this, so I’m not relisting a whole bunch of them. The only thing I have to focus on is the idea that Star Trek is no longer suitable for adults. Various TV shows are designed to retain younger generations of fans. This means a lot of challenges and flashes are preferred over smart stories and complex characters.

After extensive success Ando For Star Wars, I hope someone at Paramount rethinks making a mature and difficult Star Trek series. Obviously, this material obviously has a lot of audiences Ando It’s any sign. So why didn’t Star Trek try to do something with this vein?

If you want my opinion (why would you read this?), Star Trek needs to do something for adult audiences. I think there is a very simple way to do this with a time-tested genre: Star Trek requires a legal thriller release.

Make Star Trek serious again

One of the biggest problems with Star Trek fans like me is that older performances show military professionals acting like professionals. USS staff have a rhythm and tone enterprise And the people of the nine in Deep Space were completely abandoned by modern Star Trek. I’m not saying I don’t like the stupidity in Star Trek – “Take Me to Holosuite” is one of my favorite episodes – but generally turning to modern Star Trek to frivolous characters and quirky.

The Star Trek Legal Thriller will provide an opportunity to return to the serious environment with professionals who need to show a degree of Stoicism at work. This doesn’t mean the story told cannot be interesting, but the legal environment will provide Star Trek with the same tone structure as the classic show.

That’s not to say Star Trek doesn’t get the modern inspiration for the legal thriller series.

Just turn it into Star Trek

Nicholas Hoult Jurors #2

After watching two movies from last year, I thought of a show from a Star Trek legal thriller series: in conclusion and Jury #2. These are all fascinating mature films with complex characters and motivations that get me away, “It would be great if Star Trek did something like this.” I wouldn’t go into my own court (unless people are interested and find me on social media), but it’s arguably good to have inspired both movies. I recommend them to anyone, but especially if you want to see how you can turn them into adult Star Trek stories.

They provide compelling protagonists who must navigate through their own survival and these forces must navigate. Instead of sloppo Chapter 31which would be a great way to explore the sticky and even darker parts of Starfleet. Most importantly, it doesn’t have to understate its drama, dialogue or character to be shown to the so-called young audience. It can tell an adult story for adults Ando.

I don’t like to do it with modern Star Trek, so I hope something will happen that reminds me of the golden age of the franchise. Star Trek’s legal thriller seems to be ripe.


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