I really liked this episode. Gave it a 9. As with other episodes, I could have used one or two more intimate character building scenes to pad out the runtime a little and flesh out the other characters more.
So here are some stream of consciousness thoughts (I don't know if I will have a real handle on how I feel about Discovery, other than generally very positive, until I get to rewatch the whole first season after it's done):
- I felt the fight choreography, both in the hallway, and the final fight were probably the best in Trek. It has never really been done well before.
- I could have done with Lorca not falling for the "I am bringing the captured Emperor to you and coming over to your side" bit, but I didn't think it was bad, just not original.
- Glad that Georgiou survived, hope she isn't killed off nor sacrifices herself by the end of the season.
- Didn't expect the Klingon war to last beyond the end of this episode as more than a "mopping up" exercise.
- Unless they surprise me, I doubt we will see anything from Captain Killy, PU Lorca, or MU Voq. Too bad - those could have been cool bits to see. The clip from After Trek makes me doubt the ISS Discovery jumped to the Prime Universe.
- Glad to see the bridge crew working together more and getting more lines. After Trek confirms that the writers were building up to having a real bridge crew - that they were basically not growing up to their full potential under MU Lorca.
- Will be interested to see if Saru becomes the new captain of the Discovery. Apart from the situation on Pahvo, which should not be swept under the rug, I don't at all understand some people's apparent revulsion at the idea that Saru could become a captain. I think in all his interactions (aside from Pahvo) he has been reasonable and intelligent - a predilection toward caution and "flight" isn't disqualifying provided he demonstrates the ability to command as a captain should, which I think he has done. Especially in these last episodes, he has gotten a chance to shine away from Lorca.
It is interesting to read the most vehement ongoing objections to Discovery. Originally they were unsubtle complaints about the look of the show (especially the Klingons), or the visual tech level, or the The Cage-era time setting. Now the strongest, unwavering objections are more justified (having seen actual episodes) and generally focus on more substantive elements (like dialogue or character motivation). But many of them still seem fairly unreasoned or hyperbolic. Descriptions of "not Star Trek", "trash", "worst ever", or that 'now that all has been revealed as a hoax, terrible, and laughable' just continue to demonstrate a lack of objectivity about the quality of show. Though one might dislike a plot or a character, Discovery by no means can be considered "trash", and in contrast has lots of strong, well liked, and high-quality elements. At the very least I find these criticisms evidence of a lack of self-awareness that individual dislikes do not equal universal, objective understanding/opinion. I just hope that these sorts of opinions don't convince the average reader on these threads, nor are used to persuade others, that these kinds of opinions are accurate or representative of more than a tiny, vocal minority of viewers.
In other news:
Because you can't turn when traveling at Warp.
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I believe that is the only reference to a ship not turning during warp travel, though of course we have many visual scenes showing the ship turning and no mention of changing to impulse going back to many, many occurrences during TOS and onward.
Because TNG always had streaking stars when at warp. the wounded clearly shows the Phoenix turning at warp as she heads away from the Enterprise.
Have to with agree with mswood. The 'no turning at warp' was a piece-of-crap line written in Voyager (that wasn't even paid off well in the episode), that was supported by absolutely nothing in prior Trek, and openly refuted by many instances. Discovery is in line with canon on this point, Voyager is not. Plus if one wants to argue that Voyager's statement wins, Discovery could be flying in a square with only brief, computer-controlled drops to sublight at the corners.