Unlike some other universes, here in the Prime timeline you don't get promoted to captain without serving a full tour as XO.Probably hasn’t got enough experience yet. Plus he’s too tasty to be captain.
Unlike some other universes, here in the Prime timeline you don't get promoted to captain without serving a full tour as XO.Probably hasn’t got enough experience yet. Plus he’s too tasty to be captain.
That is my desktop wallpaper
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Sonequa Martin-Green's performance of Burnham is simply awful. It is the single worst element of this show for me. I could probably deal with most of the other points together but whether it's the writing or the actress or some combination of both she has all the personality of a stone.
If only they'd put the bomb on Praxis, the opening of Star Trek VI would finally make sense.
Hmm. Amanda said it had been "four years." You're placing JTB in 2268? How do you figure?About Sarek and Spock, just because they have not talked to each other in 18 years, it does not mean they did not see each other in those years. In "Journey to Babel", it was stated by Amanda that Spock last visited his home in 2264, when he saw both of his parents.
Well, no official record, but presumably other Starfleet officers at the time would have heard of it. In particular, if a random cadet on a completely different ship had heard about the mutineer, by name, within six months of the event (as demonstrated by Tilly in episode 3), it seems more than likely that the mutineer's adopted brother would have heard about it, whether it wound up "expunged" or not. So if one considers that "no mutiny" line as canonical (debatable within TOS itself, as discussed elsewhere, but for the sake of argument), it's preserved by a technicality, but not in a particularly convincing way.And, the writers of the series fixed another canon issue. By expunging [Burnham's] record, there would be no record of a mutiny, making it so we do not need to reconcile the events seen in the series with "The Tholian Web" where Spock stated that there had never been a mutiny aboard a starship.
Hear, hear. There won't even be much in the way of new Trek novels for the rest of this year. It'll be quite a drought.I must say, I have so very much enjoyed the experience of talking about weekly Star Trek with you all. Even when we didn't all agree, there was actual passion and excitement for the franchise again, and it's been too long. ...I will definitely miss this. Season 2 can't come fast enough.
Excellent point. I'd be inclined to say the writers were trying to up the ante by having the Klingon fleet closing in on Earth, but it just didn't work (and not just because of its implausibility given the strategic situation laid out in the immediately previous episode). A threat as dire as that could and should have had the Discovery crew actively debating what their best course of action was... especially after they found out the truth about their "real" mission. Their unspoken solidarity after just a few words from Burnham was awfully convenient... disappointingly so. The debate would have been interesting....I'm NOT saying that this isn't the ultimate decision they should have come to; more taht not one person on the Bridge had a different viewpoint or spoke to the Admiralty's position (IE Give it a TOS resolution wityh a couple of characters willing to sacrifice Qoonos to save Earth...Hell, there was so much ridiculous nonsensical filler on the Planet there was time for a little TOS Kirk/McCoy/Spock/Scotty-esque argument.) Again, the fact this exact same Bridge crew (including Saru) was ready to string Burnham up at the start of the series for all the friends and family they lost - the fact they're all so willing to sacrifice Earth at this point (without a really workable/different plan available to them at that point) is a bit ridiculous (IMO).
Ugly?!? It was beautiful. Exquisite. A delight. (Just as it was in TNG's "Relics" a few years earlier.)But in contrary to you, I'll be very very disappointed if [the bridge] is the same as the original TOS or the Cage. They did it in Star Trek Enterprise, and it was very ugly.
Good points. I couldn't help noticing that a lot of other characters behaved in implausibly plot-driven ways here, but I didn't really notice that Georgiou did, too. Once it's pointed out, though, it's kind of glaring.Thirdly: Burnham all but demands that Georgiou shoot her. Uh, hello! It's the MIRROR UNIVERSE F**KING EVIL EMPERPOR! She killed a roomful of her top advisers with her demon fidget spinner just to keep a secret. She made that decision in a SECOND. Why would she NOT shoot Burnham? It makes no emotional sense for her not to. It makes less sense for Burnham to tempt her. Burnham was counting on Emperor Georgiou's sentiment; that's not something I'd gamble on.
...
Fifth, the whole Georgiou sex scene thing. Nothing but gratuitous. I don't think one becomes Emperor by being the kind of person who goes off-track on a critical mission for a little nooky. This carelessness and lack of discipline / judgment made no sense to me. There is a time for pleasure and there is a time for the mission: I can't imagine Mirror Georgiou NOT knowing the difference.
This. X1000.They didn’t play at all with the fact that the Emperor has the next 10 years of Prime knowledge in her head. She could probably use that to make herself rich.
I gave it a 7 and that was my highest score this season.Yes I gave it a 7/10, lowest of the season. I could see what they were going for, but the execution wasn't as good. And as many have pointed out, things happened that were too quick and convenient.
But even if it were true that she's the bestest ever in a way that makes her seem larger than life, how does that differ from male protagonists like Kirk, or Spock, or Picard or other lead characters in previous franchises who have done extra-ordinary things because they are...wait for it...extra-ordinary. She is meant to be an exceptional person who stumbled and made a bad decision, then had to work to atone for her mistakes and re-earn the trust of those she ended up working with. We literally see her doing shit which leads to bad consequences because she's not perfect. But she does try to stick to her principles and has over the course of the season managed to find where the line is for herself in terms of Federation ideals and thus, became a mouthpiece for that, when others were faltering. Good for her.
The dreaded MS term always seems to get dragged out, in particular, for female protagonists who display some level of exceptionalism. How are they ANY MORE implausible than the gazillion hyper-competent men with tragic pasts or some other quirk of fate who have previously gotten to be big damn hero lead characters in sci fi or genre films or TV shows?
Isn’t that just the same as the Discovery one? They look the same to me.I wonder if that now that the Shenzhou bridge isn't needed anymore, they'll build an Enterprise set.
As the episode settles in my mind, I can't help but think of the expansion of the season order to 15 episodes involvement of Akiva Goldsman for the last one, the guy behind so many adaptations that seemed to lose the spirit of their source material. I liked how the conclusion of the mirror universe found the crew gelling together rekindling their beliefs in the ideals of Starfleet and being true to what made them join in the first place.This episode was really disappointing. Now they are ending the seasons on fanwanks rather than on it's own terms.
That's what you get when you change a 4:3 to 16:9Why does the Enterprise look squished?
That many actors played Spock in Star Trek 3 alone.So, if Pike gets a new actor for S2, I gotta ask the keepers of Trek trivia:
Will Christopher Pike be the one character in all of Trek history who has been played by the most number of different actors? It will be four.
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