I heard about the whole thing being kind of uplifting. Something about a hopefull view of society.
Which season should one with no prior knowledge of star trek start from?
I heard about the whole thing being kind of uplifting. Something about a hopefull view of society.
Which season should one with no prior knowledge of star trek start from?
Probably TNG season 1
It was the first Trek in years after TOS, and it had to basically re-introduce everything that later series build upon.
My dirty secret is that I’ve never seen TOS more than a few episodes, clips, or summaries of the higher-profile episodes. Didn’t get into Trek until long after TNG was off the air, and don’t know if I could sit through the dated production quality of TOS (nothing against it; it was a product of its time and budget).
First couple seasons of TNG were pretty rough. If someone told me the first episode of something I should love was “Encounter at Farpoint”, I think I’d drop the show after the first episode.
I’m going to suggest something different: Enterprise Season 1 Episode 1.
A new watcher would be on nearly equal footing with the crew in discovering the galaxy beyond Earth. Many of the same frustrations about being held back or being naively altruistic would be genuine human responses new viewers could identify with.
I think Encounter at Farpoint is important for that hopeful view of the future that OP is looking for. It establishes what the Federation is as a power in the Alpha Quadrant, and also gives a nice basic moral hurdle for them to overcome. Plus, seeing Q’s first appearance is kinda necessary imo
Fair point on both. ENT does get a lot less “optimistic” as it enters the “war on terror” seasons, though, but the first season for sure.
Re: TNG S1
I didn’t hate “Encounter at Farpoint” and it definitely wouldn’t have turned me off to the series. “Code of Honor” though is one I routinely skip.
Responding to your edit:
Some years back the production company replaced all the exterior physical model shots with pretty tasteful CGI. They also cleaned up the image quality and sound of the live action. It was a gentle but successful attempt at addressing some of those production value concerns you have. However, it does nothing for the inherent misogyny in the stories or costume design. I don’t have much of a problem with that because it was progressive for its time.