asalaw
Master Member
I don't think there's any question that Kurtzman is a no-talent hack who's ruined every Trek he's touched. Malalas is doing far better, the self-references in the show notwithstanding.I’m coming more and more to the conclusion that BETTER CALL SAUL is actually the, well, better of the two shows. Deeper, more methodical, less dependent on crime-genre plots and action, and even more focused on characters and relationships. With a more subtle bag of writing tricks at its disposal, since Vince Gilligan and his crew had been honing their craft for years on the parent show. BB and BCS are a brilliant duology, and an achievement unequalled in the history of television.
There are people out there who have only watched and loved one show or the other (and it’s not strictly necessary to watch both to understand and enjoy both), but each show is one half of a greater whole. I like to think of it as one giant show that switched gears and focus halfway through, jumped back in the timeline, then jumped forward again to provide a brilliant coda and satisfying ending to both halves. Some of the best storytelling I’ve ever seen, and perhaps second only to STAR TREK in regards to my boundless love and admiration.
…and then there’s KurtzmanTREK, largely still drooling at the starting line.
Yeah, I think that meta jokes and references aimed at the audience, like that joke in FIRST CONTACT, should be used very, very sparingly, AND should be earned, AND should make logical sense, in-universe.
And I didn’t forget those early TNG examples. McCoy was never even named in the pilot, remember. And, in-universe, it’s not at all outside the realm of possibility that McCoy requested to tour the new ship bearing the Enterprise name. I think they found just the right tone and balance for that cameo without being gratuitous and distracting. A passing of the torch via a surprise cameo without sailing over the top. Although it’s placement in the episode is a bit odd (a choice no doubt intended to cap off “Part 1” of the pilot with the cameo when the episode was cut in half for syndication).
And, of course, GENERATIONS later had Kirk, Scott, and Chekov aboard the Enterprise-B as a sort of in-universe publicity stunt, so there’s an in-universe precedent.
As for “The Naked Now”, I see it less as fanservice than as a really lazy recycling of an old TOS plot in order to quickly establish the new show’s characters.
I'll keep an eye out for Saul, though it may be a while--I'm working on my next fan film, and it may take me a year to finish. So that's sucking up a lot of my free time now.