...Trek toothbrush it would have either been the same as a regular toothbrush but with a couple stupid blinky lights on it like every random prop in TNG-VOY, or it would have been some overly complex item like a laser or sonic toothbrush that would needlessly require a distracting and budget-sucking special effect when a regular toothbrush would do just fine...
I agree about the blinky lights, but I think it was specifically supposed to be a sonic toothbrush, just a low-key one.
...But the tardigrade being warp-capable just seemed to me to violate continuity with . . . anything.
I think someone else pointed this out, but, Ripper wasn't warp capable. He just accessed the mycelial network and jumped somewhere else.
Fair enough - you're certainly entitled to want to see the mirror Stamets. I guess I am not a huge fan of mirror episodes in general. They're palatable if I know the characters well, but I'm cringing at the thought of a mirror Discovery at this point in time.
I think that an early "Mirror" episode could be done well, even if we don't know our characters well yet, if it is done in such a way as to reveal our characters. Isn't that the whole point? Revelation by contrast?
...but because I see it as the wrong choice tactically. Mudd needs to be brought back to the Federation for a debriefing... he might have information Starfleet could use. It kind of detracts from the idea that he will do anything to win the war.
I like the thought of getting info from him, but that is only viable if you actually get off the ship. In another scenario, say where you are about to be beamed to safety, sure Lorca would take Mudd with him, but when they still have to fight their way to the shuttle bay, steal a ship, and escape to Federation territory, trying to take Mudd - a known collaborator/traitor with them - is foolhardy.
There ain't gonna' be much "discovering" going on in this season of "Discovery", ain't it?
...That being said: I'm not very content with this series at this moment. It's overly dark, violent. And it seems, we only ever going to see Fedration officers or klingons in dark Federation or klingon hallways. No new planets. No strange alien species. Not even to make contact with to help in the war effort. All of this feels awfully secluded from a rich, diverse universe.
...THIS was a D7? Are they fucking kidding us?
...Lorca really didn't have a plan with Burnham? Apart from letting her hang around his ship and see what happens? In the beginning, I thought he had a well-thought out evil scheme. But apparently, he's also only throwing shit at the wall to see what sticks.
...So. In the final moments of the episode. We have a Godzilla-sized tardigrade...
GO TO WARP? On it's own?
What?
- The discovery in this season isn't as much of discovering new worlds as discovering yourself and your opponent.
- More discovery to come, with new planets, etc. in the rest of this season and further seasons
- The D-7 only captured Lorca, then he was transferred to a prison ship. We only really see the underside of the D-7 and only close up.
- Lorca's plan is to get the best tools he can find to win the war. According to Tilly, Burnham was one of the most promising 1st officers in the fleet who Lorca believes is willing to break the rule to achieve the best outcomes. That was/is his plan.
- Where do you get Godzilla-sized from? Ripper was normal sized, and then he didn't go to warp, he accessed the spore network and jumped.
Indeed, the list is specifically for "decorated" starship captains, which probably isn't a good indication of how to cope with the exact situation at hand, but OTOH might well be the best Saru can do. These people got medals. They probably survived exceptional circumstances, then, and perhaps even triumphed there. What they did outside those times isn't all that relevant.
I'm sorta seeing Tyler pushing her out of the way. But that doesn't yet explain why Lorca would take a head shot when he hit all the expendable Klingons sensibly in the middle....
- I liked Saru's first attempt at self-analysis, very scientific. I also like that he gives it up at the end.
- Tyler did not push her at all. He was laying on the ground when Lorca fired.
- Lorca just missed and hit the bulkhead. No other intention in the scene.
Yeah its a shame about the Klingon ships, the new ones look more like the Negh'Var than anything else, the whole avian design ethos is gone it seems.
I thought the BoPs in the "battle of the binary stars" were very bird-like, and doubly-so for the "raiders" in this episode. For the most part, I don't feel we have gotten a good look at the enemy "capital" ships to really be able to tell their design influences.
Or TNG where they allowed whole civilisations to be destroyed because of #primedirective
Or ENT, where the allowed whole civilizations to be destroyed with a lack of #primedirective ("Dear Doctor")
...It was that he refused to get his eyes fixed in order to remind him of what he did. He's making himself suffer because he feels guilty. It shows that while he's made what we might consider to be some very dark choices, he has a conscience and is not a sociopath....
What I don't understand is why he would leave his ship before self-destructing it. However, he could have had mission-critical intelligence which he was ordered to return to Starfleet. Sure, he could have left it in the care of a First Officer or something, but perhaps his hands were tied. If this is the case, he literally did nothing dishonorable as a captain.
- Bingo. Lorca feels the pain from his loss and actions, a lot like Burnham. I also expect we will learn more about what went down on the Buran later.
I'm a little bit worried about what kind of plots they want to tell in the second season...
What are they going to do once the war with the klingons is over? I fear the writer's not coming up with good motivations for stories once there isn't an obvious enemy that needs to be defeated every week anymore. We'll see. Hope they don't introduce just another space war agains different evil aliens then...
We know from their comments that the Klingon war only motivates this first season, and that they have fallout and repercussions that follow on from the war and actions taken that will be addressed in season 2. Fear not, the writers are already planning ahead.
...My imagination is just fine. I don't need to see the bootheel slam into someone's head or the aftermath. Cut away, foley in the appropriate sound effects, and show me the reaction of those in the room. That tells me all I need to know.
I watched the scene twice, and I do think they cut away just at the moment of impact. Just like the scene in The Dark Knight with the pencil, you think you see more than you actually do. But they do show more blood than before.
That's a wrong analogy if I ever heard one. I'm not complaining about the war being mentioned or simply there. I'm worried because it has become their bread-and-butter storytelling device. The fallback plot generator. Every episode has some action, some space battles, some gore, and a ticking clock, with currently every conflict being with the klingons. This is (for now) the DNA of this show. But they're not going to be able to continue that level of conflict once that war is over. What then? I doubt DIS is going to become a "boring" peace-time show like TNG (or TOS, or VOY, or ENT) was after that. They simply grew the wrong audience for that by focusing so much on battles. It feels a bit like DS9, where the writers also clearly didn't knew what to do with the characters once there wasn't a war going on. And such, decided to always be at war. Whether it be against the Dominion, or the klingons, or the Romulans and Cardassians agains the Dominion, or else. I don't want DIS to just start the next war once the one with the klingons is over.
So many points to disagree on.
- First, this season is based on a war with the Klingons, so it is the background, it drives the action, it contains a lot of the moral sticking points for our characters. That is the point. But the writers have already said that season 2 will move on from the end of the war, but will include its fallout.
- DS9 did very well with the non-war stuff. Just because they didn't have as many non-war-centric episodes as TNG or VOY doesn't make them bad or incapable of telling other stories. Those were just the ones they wanted to tell. On that note, TNG did invent plenty of wars for the Federation (vs the Cardassians), they just placed the war in the recent past. So it isn't like the Federation is a stranger to war.
Maybe Voq/Tyler is truly pissed at her because they made him human. Or it could have just been an act. As previously mentioned, his pummeling her was probably the same as foreplay. A goodbye quickie.
I'm not necessarily convinced Tyler is Voq but I definitely think he's a Klingon spy. He might even be the real Tyler whose mind was wiped and reprogrammed with the mind sifter.
I think the whole "mind ripper" Manchurian Candidate bit is the key here, and the reason this storyline can work - Tyler doesn't know he is a spy.
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And he had to pay (with some kind of monetary system) to get her. So its canon money exists in TOS lol
That is if Mudd was working/living/buying within the Federation. He could be living outside it, but still be negatively affected when two of the galaxy's major powers go to war...
But, despite that, I agree that TOS does use money (based on all the other references). It isn't totally obsoleted in the Federation until the 24th century.