I really liked the premise of the episode but had a hard time trying to wrap my head around how stupid Kelly was during the initial encounter. I get that the Orville crew aren't the best and brightest of the Union but I'm going to venture a guess that healing a child of a non-fatal wound is a serious offense of Union's equivalent of the prime directive which probably includes "don't mess with ancient civilizations". The cynic in me also thinks a 21st century society would be less than welcoming and accepting of an alien android showing up on their doorstep.
The crew just walked all over the prime directive trying to right their wrongs and make Kelly feel better which didn't sit right with me.
I am a religious person and I enjoyed it immensely. That 21st century-era sequence was breathtaking. The presence of Jay Jackson kind of broke the heaviness for me. I wash they hadn't done that. But otherwise this was a wonderful episode.
Did anyone notice how Lamar's bridge replacement was never the same person twice?
Actually, it explicitly said otherwise.Basically the first season finale said religion really bad, logic and reason really really good.
Actually, it explicitly said otherwise.
I liked the alien with the purple hairI did. That was interesting too.
The narrative was that religion and mythology constitute a step along the way from savagery to reason, possibly even a natural one, at least in the context of parallel evolution in the Orville universe. That's anything but "religion is bad," even according to how the metaphor applies to the real world.I just watched the scene again. It basically said have faith in reason and the whole Kelly thing helped them flourish but it was almost implying they got out of the dark ages. How did you read it.
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