I guess there was once or twice that all power was diverted to the forward shields or something,
Yeah, but that cracked me up because
When Pike ordered all the power to the forward shields, the very next thing they did was bank the Enterprise hard to starboard and got hit... you guessed it, in the side! That was an eye-roll moment for me.
Tasha's greatest moment was probably Yesterday's Enterprise.
I'm with Hec on this one.
As for TNG, we watched them by renting the videos as they were released on video before they were aired in the UK, unless you had the satellite channel which not many people did in those days. I cannot tell you how relieved I was to be able to have approximately 1 minute between the end of
Best of Both Worlds
part 1 & part 2. Waiting the entire summer for that cliffhanger's conclusion would have killed me.
And seasons 4 and later of DS9 rocked! I'm a big sucker for momentous spaceship battles and watching numerous Galaxy class starships hand the Cardassians their ass made me a very happy geek.
Waiting the entire summer for that cliffhanger's conclusion would have killed me.
WIMP! I had to wait a whole summer for it! UPHILL BOTH WAYS! IN THE SNOW!
As much as I like "Best of Both Worlds," I liked the film "First Contact" better for the Locutus residual.
There were a lot of things I liked about First Contact (James Cromwell among them), but it was still a long TV episode. IMNSHO, there's not a single actual Next Gen movie. They're all long TV episodes that I had to go to a movie theater and pay to see.
As for unforgiven Next Gen sins, my personal beef is what they did to Data in the movies. They spent seven long years carefully laying the ground work for Data to spontaneously develop genuine emotion, then they screwed it up once by fusing the emotion chip into his brain, and screwed it up a second time by giving him the ability to switch it on and off at will.
HATE!
There were a lot of things I liked about First Contact (James Cromwell among them), but it was still a long TV episode. IMNSHO, there's not a single actual Next Gen movie. They're all long TV episodes that I had to go to a movie theater and pay to see.
What is the distinction between a long TV episode and a movie? I have wondered about this. For instance,
Serenity
felt to me like a movie, whereas
The X-Files: I Want to Believe
felt to me like a long TV episode. I remember really liking
First Contact
as a movie, not a long TV episode (but I had never watched the series).
the feeling that nothing really terrible will happen because there will be a new episode next week? Epicness?
yes, "did I really have to leave the house for this?"
What is the distinction between a long TV episode and a movie?
For me, it's a little bit of what Juliebird said, but also it's about the timing of the dramatic beats. Now I'm not talking some formulaic, this-happens-by/on-this-page thing, but there is a fundamental difference in how you should approach the rhythm of your story when you're making a movie as opposed to a TV show.
I think First Contact was the most valiant effort the Next Gen crew put forth, but I can still pinpoint where the commercial breaks are supposed to fall. 100% pure, undiluted TV storytelling.
I never saw
I Want to Believe,
but I believe that it was TV movie making.
Fight the Future
had the same problem.
I do think
Serenity
suffered from it a little bit, but in a more residual, ghost-like fashion. As final arbiter on this matter, I thus deem Serenity an actual film.
I think to earn "movie" the airing should exceed the standard scope, either visually or narrative-wise, preferably both. The stakes should definitely feel higher, if not the reward.
I think to earn "movie" the airing should exceed the standard scope, either visually or narrative-wise, preferably both. The stakes should definitely feel higher, if not the reward.
Very much this too. For me, I never once felt like First Contact (or really any of the Next Gen movies) wasn't showing me something they couldn't show me in a two-part episode.
No love for Picard as Locutus?
I have enough to make up for any lack on other people's part. My friends and I were amazed that TNG actually improved on the excitement of "Yesterday's Enterprise," when we'd previously thought it was probably going to be the high water mark for the entire series.