She's gotta unite the houses first. That'll take awhile, and then Praxis explodes and more problems, so they never get around to conquering, but it's still on their to-do list.
How could the crew prevent the device going off? The immediately preceding scenes had made it clear they couldn't retrieve it via transporter, and they apparently had no alternative in mind. Georgiou had the detonator. What else could they do, except try to apprehend her before she used it?It was made pretty clear to her that the crew weren't going to accept the plan, so if she had done nothing, she would assume the crew would act to prevent the device going off. ...
Umm, what are you talking about? We know Spock served under Pike for eleven years, four months, and five days — from before the events of "The Cage," until Pike handed off the captaincy to Kirk, hence including the timeframe of this show. The shared glance between Sarek and Burnham in the final scene certainly suggests they expect Spock to be aboard....I also like how they set it so that it would not be Spock on the Enterprise at this time, saved them having to deal with that bit of tricky casting.
and the admiral doesn't know that. she only knows the crew found out what she was willing to do and would try to stop itHow could the crew prevent the device going off? The immediately preceding scenes had made it clear they couldn't retrieve it via transporter, and they apparently had no alternative in mind. Georgiou had the detonator.
Hey she got rewarded for it and made a tiresome speech.
My prediction of the closing scene is: fireworks on Earth, Vulcan, Andor and Kling while the Humans and Klingons celebrate the end of war sharing a barrel of prune juice and dancing in the Mycelial Forests of New Endor.![]()
Like others have said, it felt a bit rushed, but overall I was pretty happy with it. Tied everything up sufficiently and got us all excited for next season.
Hopefully they shake up the writing staff a bit, maybe bring in a new showrunner, so next season won't feel as messy.
He could be on leave on Vulcan after Enterprises first 5 year mission for instance.Umm, what are you talking about? We know Spock served under Pike for eleven years, four months, and five days — from before the events of "The Cage," until Pike handed off the captaincy to Kirk, hence including the timeframe of this show. The shared glance between Sarek and Burnham in the final scene certainly suggests they expect Spock to be aboard.
A whole ship of trained and armed Starfleet officers? I'm sure they'd have found a way to stop one person with a detonator. Our crews have faced much tougher odds in the past. But with the Admiral's support, they were able to offer her an official promise of freedom, and then try to turn the detonator to their advantage rather than give up on the plan entirely. Although, of the three people she speaks to, the Admiral's support is the one she needs least, that much is true. Her speech on the bridge is really to get the crew on board.How could the crew prevent the device going off? The immediately preceding scenes had made it clear they couldn't retrieve it via transporter, and they apparently had no alternative in mind. Georgiou had the detonator. What else could they do, except try to apprehend her before she used it?
(And as I speculated, the only apparent means they might have had of doing that would actually have seemed safer than what they came up with after talking with Cornwell!...)
Well, sure, anything could be possible. But what you wrote was that "they set it so that it would not be Spock on the Enterprise at this time." That seemed counter-intuitive.He could be on leave on Vulcan... Expecting Spock to be aboard and him being aboard and actually being seen are two different things. As I said it wouldn't surprise me if they do something to dodge that particular casting bullet...
Chewie didn't get a medal. Which was total BS, in my opinion.Strongly disagree. I loved Sinclair and didn't find Sheridan or the lameass romance that followed at all compelling.
* *
He did show remorse and seemed grateful that it hadn't had to be done that way. But the smile. Yeah. I didn't like that. He went from stony stoic Sarek (in most eps) to pseudo-human Sarek.
Nope! Didn't work for me.
Seriously mawkish. I was rolling my eyes and it very much reminded me of that original Star Wars scene (Sorry, I'm old school. It's just Star Wars to me.)
He did, it was just too small to fit around his neck. He's holding it in his hand. Mind you that's a retcon from the new comics.Chewie didn't get a medal. Which was total BS, in my opinion.
[QUOTE="There was no leverage at all. L'Rell didn't have to anything to help the Federation or end the war, she didn't even agree to that before she was given the bomb. She was handed the power over the Klingon empire, with no promises, let alone any guarantees.
They knew that L'Rell's whole motivatin behind the war was the unification of the Klingon houses. She knew this wasn't happening and conquering and splitting up the spoils was actually doing the opposite. She was looking for a way to unite the houses and it was handed to her. As far as why not unite the houses but still crush the Federation. I think her Ash relationship has something to do with that. Ash has a lot of control over her as well. I think that is the primary reason he had to stay with her (to keep her on task)
As far as why not unite the houses but still crush the Federation
Captain Garth?
Fuck, I don't know if I could take the Axalash from all of that.
Well they kinda took over a half developed show with Fuller's exit...........I am hoping with THEM mapping everything from the start it will have a better flow. Gotta be a pain to take over what someone else had put into motion.Like others have said, it felt a bit rushed, but overall I was pretty happy with it. Tied everything up sufficiently and got us all excited for next season.
Hopefully they shake up the writing staff a bit, maybe bring in a new showrunner, so next season won't feel as messy. This episode felt a bit like the writers were washing their hands of everything that had come before.
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