Discovery lacked the DNA of other Star Trek in my opinion. Note that I did not finish the series so some of these things may have improved in the last season or 2.
It focused mainly around a few characters instead of fleshing out a great ensemble cast
The visual language of the show does not match Trek IMO. It's too dark, too much blue, it looks like a Michael Bay thing
The characters did not feel like professional officers. Excess PDA, emotional outbursts, cowboy lone hero nonsense, snark, overt arguments, constantly raised voices, etc. In previous Trek, raised emotions were exceedingly notable, and meant something really important was happening
The klingons
I didn't like many of the characters as people, including most of the main cast's characters
There were things I did like
Great premise with the spore drive
I liked some of the characters, like Stamets and Saru
Great SFX
I'm sure I'm forgetting things, it's been a while since I've thought about this show
Overall, I thought it was fine. I think it got hit a little harshly by critics. It's not terrible (read: unwatchable), but it's pretty firmly my least favorite Star Trek series.
Without actually looking through the full episode lists, and just going off what I remember of each season, here are my gut ratings:
S1: 3/10
S2: 5/10
S3: 4/10
S4: 8/10
Overall: 5/10
Going a bit more into my thoughts in each...
Season 1 - 3/10
Pros:
First new Trek in a while.
Neat graphics.
Great cast. (Especially Doug Jones as Saru).
Cons:
Prequel-itis...
New graphics don't match the TOS era.
We already know, roughly, how things will pan out.
Interesting season-long mystery, with payoff for multiple story beats.
Introduces Anson Mount as Captain Pike, leading to the spinoff of Strange New Worlds.
Cons:
More prequel-itis...
Puts legacy characters in peril, when the audience knows they canonically must survive. Saps any tension.
Galaxy-level threat must obviously be defeated, since we know there's life in the future canon.
Burnham time suit well beyond reasonable tech level for the era.
Control drone fleet tech unreasonable for the era.
Predestination/Bootstrap paradox.
Discount Borg.
Season 3 - 4/10
Pros:
Finally out of prequel territory.
Cool future tech.
Interesting mystery of The Burn.
Great character development.
Cons:
Unsatisfying conclusion to The Burn mystery.
Tired of seeing The Federation in shambles.
Seriously, the source of The Burn was stupid.
Discovery would be able to solve so, sooo many problems in this era.
Did I mention the sad kid causing The Burn?
Season 4 - 8/10
Pros:
More character development.
Federation starting to get back on its feet.
Interesting mystery around the "Dark Matter Anomaly" (DMA)
We get to see The Federation deal with a truly alien first contact. Species 10-C was amazing.
Cons:
Once again, an existential threat. Very exhausting.
Conclusion
I think Discovery suffered from one main issue, in multiple way: season-based plots. Since every season had a single main plot, any issues with the plot ruin the whole season. We don't get standalone great episodes like in the old series, which you could watch at random. You kinda need to watch the whole season. Furthermore, since each season had to have a big plot, every season is dealing with a huge issue. It's exhausting being in an existential crisis the entire time. That's the feeling we have in our real world right now. That's the reason I watch Star Trek; it's a glimpse at how the future might be brighter. Discovery never felt like a promising future. It felt like we are going to be struggling for our lives for the next millennium and more.
So, I still enjoyed it as a piece of media, and a part of the Star Trek canon, but it's not a show I see myself watching again and again like the rest of the franchise.
My major issues with Discovery are two, but they apply to most modern TV series:
Too much talk, when a single sentence or gesture would have been enough.
The assumption that people care more if the stakes are incredibly high.
Yet, as I said: these apply to a lot of recent TV shows and films (Picard is another prime example) and are basically caused by lazy writing and direction.
A retcon is still a retcon even if it fits or doesnt inherently contradict anything. They do it in comics all the time. Having spoc suddenly have a secret human sister he cant talk about because shes classified is a retcon regardless of whether it fits or was well done.
You're right that I couldn't think of any explicit retcons. The closest I could think of, other than technology, were Burnham being related to Spock (which you touched on), and how absolutely decimated the Federation was by the Klingons while Discovery was in the mirror universe (again, not necessarily a retcon, but it seems like it would have been mentioned more).
Regarding tech, I had legitimately forgotten that Burnham's parents and the time suit were Section 31. That said, what other amazing tech do we ever see out of Section 31? Granted, we don't even see much of Section 31 in other shows, outside of DS9 and ENT, but in those cases, I seem to recall them being more intelligence operatives. They accomplish their job by knowing more than others, and operating outside usual Federation conventions. It's spy stuff, not super weapons (outside the Changeling virus). But maybe I'm forgetting things.
The premise in the beginning is great (and I for one don’t even hate the Klingons) but it devolves into revolving far too much around Michael Burnham, a deeply unpleasant and annoying character.
So of course she Spocks secret sister and of course her mum is the key to saving the galaxy and of course her mirror universe equivalent is the Empress’s prodigy. She’s an annoying writer self insert character and annoys me every time she says a single word.
If Michael Burnham was a better character or at least had less screen time, I’d like Discovery much more.
However, most crew members besides Burnham, at least those that actually get time to shine, are pretty great and the best thing Discovery did was introducing Anson Mount as Christopher Pike and setting up Strange New Worlds, which is a 10/10 so far.
Also, DIS is far too dark. You don’t notice it that much while watching the show but after watching SNW… I recently went back to watch a few Pike clips from DIS, to see how he compares to SNW and damn, DIS is gloomy and I definitely prefer my trek bright and optimistic…
Well, Discovery is the only Trek I gave up on. Forced myself through S1 & S2, but eventually decided it was not worth my time. SNW gave me back my hope on good New Trek though.
Didn't care for the story, the characters or the futuristic looks even though it was supposed to be a prequel to TOS.
Score 2 out of 10 maybe?
If you enjoy DIS, by all means, have fun. It just doesn't work for me.
Two. Started out interesting. Devolved into the Michael Burnham crying hour. I couldn’t tell you the names of half the recurring characters on the bridge because they were so under utilized. What a waste of a great cast. I especially despise plotlines like the doctor’s where characters die and are magically brought back to life like a nighttime soap opera.
They should have spun Book and Burnham off into their own show, made Saru captain, and concentrated on creating an ensemble show.
They wasted Jason Isaac’s character too. Don’t even get me started on the season where the universe was coming to an end because some alien had the sads.
But when looking at the bigger picture. This was the first time we had trek back after a long time. I think they took the criticism from this show and applied it to SNW and LD, Picard is kind of its own thing, but Season 3 of it was pretty good.
The final discovery season has been pushed and I’m hoping they decided to rework the show to give it a good send off.
But the cause of the burn was really disappointing.
I'd say it started at a 6 or 7, and grew to a strong 8 over its runtime. Most of the characters have always been beautifully nuanced, but the stakes of its plots have always been unnecessarily inflated, and the endings for each story arc are of very mixed quality. After the jump to the 31st century, the storylines became much more Star Trek-ian, and the show started to display more of its own identity separate from classic Trek and action movie tropes, and that pushed it into properly great territory.
One remarkable thing was that it paved the way for SNW.
All other captains were more interesting captains than Burnham, and that's sad, because they were removing them so fast. The happiest point for me was when they made Saru captain, only to remove it later.
I'm ok with Klingons, I think it's ok that each Star Trek generation rethink their visual language.
So nice to see this perspective! Somehow a few years ago it felt like the entire internet became obsessed with rating everything.
I feel the same way, it's all Trek!
I'm not good with scores so I'll just explain how I rate Discovery.
Back in the 90s/00s I never understood the hate that some Trek fans had towards a new Trek series. Every time a new series premiered there was a large (or at least very loud) chunk of the fanbase hating on the new series. I liked them all. Some more, some less. But I enjoyed them all for being Star Trek and watched them all countless times. (same goes for LD and SNW)
To put that in perspective:
I still don't remember the names of all the bridge officers on Discovery.
I only watch Discovery episodes once.
I never felt inclined to rewatch a single episode. It's not that all of them are bad but there's just nothing about them that makes me rewatch them. Especially since 90% of them are embedded in season-long story arcs. (same with Picard, although I do plan to rewatch season 1 and 3 at some point)
At first I liked Discovery for trying something new. I'm not one of those fans who wants a new Trek show to do exactly the same thing that other Trek shows have done before. You need to do new things if you want to keep a franchise alive. But when you do season-long story arcs you need a plan. And Discovery didn't have that. It was quite obvious both in seasons 1 and 2. Season 2 was at least helped by Captain Pike. It's hard to rate those two seasons because there were so many ups and downs. But in total I'd say the first two season were better than the 3rd and 4th seasons.
Season 3 was a chore to watch. Jumping to the future was like jumping the shark for me. There's not nearly enough world-building to make that future interesting -- and how can there be, when there's only 13 episodes and all of them are part of a story arc.
Season 4 was okay. I give them credit for doing something big with non-humanoid and really strange aliens. But this story could have been told in the 23rd century with minimal changes. So why again are they in the future?
2/10. I get the impression that they couldn't afford good writers, but the production heads could afford a LOT of cocaine. The end result is a Trek-ish setting around the biggest Mary Sue trope ever written against a character that they could not ever get up to 'likeable.' Watch as Star Fleet Officers constantly break the rules, run off without communicating effectively, disregard orders, or just plainly talk-back with amazing levels of snark to superiors. Somehow they are all written up as heroes instead of all being removed from duty and forced to spend years in front of councillors for their war PTSD... or time-travel PTSD... or mirror-universe PTSD..., discipline and corrective actions for their MANY examples of insubordination, their ship broken up to figure out space-mushroom instantaneous-travel in a post-dilithium universe, remedial training once cleared to return to figure out the changes in the world around them after the jump, and even then being kept on a short-leash because they obviously can't be trusted: they don't even fully trust each other and have demonstrated time and time again that they make the wrong decision because of their own ego...
3 - Michael Burnham is so annoying self centered and needy. If they'd moved to being a more ensemble cast sooner and not had it seem like they thought the universe revolved around her then it could have got a solid 6.
My jaw was only the floor anytime the Klingons were on screen. They’re supposed to be these formidable warriors, not lisping fish people who talk at 3/4 speed.
Apart from many points already made in the thread for me the worst thing was the acting quality of the Burnham actress and some inclusive actors didn't cut it for me in theirs quality and took me out the thing. It's somewhat uncomfortable to say this because you get accused of all kind of things, but I liked many actors in the cast. I loved the cientific guy but didn't like his partner (thought he overacted) I liked the asian badass emperor but couldn't stand the spirit of the cello guy.
This is no mean as a disrecpect to them I just didn't like it and when I read the scripts I liked them better than seeing them acted out.
0 out of 10. I was hoping Michael Burnham would die in that EVA in the first episode because they were so annoying as a character a few minutes in already and it went downhill from there. The only character I did like, the captain in the first episode died not too much later. I stuck through roughly the first 5 episodes but when that security officer went into the cage with that wild animal and got very predictably mauled I just couldn't stand the horrible writing any more.
7/10 I think its get hated on very unfairly, though it has significant structural issues that keep it from being the best of star trek. Even still, anyone who says that it didn't have the heart of star trek is wrong I think, if it wasn't still there in some essential way we wouldn't have gotten the rest of new star trek.
Also anyone who says the futuristic starship designs in discovery aren't awesome are just wrong, sorry.
I feel like my biggest issue with Discovery was that it failed to live up to its potential. There was a lot that it did right and it had some interesting characters but it never really stuck the landing on it's major arc premises.
The war with the Klingons was disappointingly handled. I find the little glimpses we get of it in strange new worlds to be way more compelling than the season that actually sort of focused on it. In addition to that the stakes were always way too damn high. Like every arc was an existential save the galaxy from war with the klingons, mirror universe invaders, or super AIs, or solve the energy problems of the future. The show also lacked that sunny optimism that trek normally has. Every once in a while it'd reach for it and then come crashing back down.
Overall it wasnt horrible but meh. When season 4 went on hiatus I lost track of when it came back. I meant to get back to the series but I just never mustered the momentum to do so.
I also feel like Picard was similar though I enjoyed the final season of that more(likely because it shamelessly tugged at my nostalgia strings.
With Strange New World and Lower decks the showrunners have found a better groove for trek I think.
I watched the first few episodes, and it just didn't grab me. Its not bad I guess, but it didn't have the same charm Roddenberry had. Honestly, I don't like any nutrek, I just watch tng/ds9/voy/ent over and over.
Explain my score... Well it doesn't have any characters I like, and that's the first time in star trek that has happened for me. Just the most annoying people everywhere, with really shitty acting skills.
5/10: Season one made me think we were getting some kind of Trek / Sliders mashup where they are lost AF in the multiverse and in theory closed all possible prequel issues right then and there. Nothing they could have done would match the show I thought we were in for.