Well, that was...50 minutes of new DIS.
It was less good than the previosu two episodes. But overall, I liked most of it. Surprisingly - the parts I thought I would dislike the most (Klingons, MU Georgiou) were
okay, wheras I really didn't like the never ending teasing and retconning of Spock!
Who'd have thought that?
Summary
Okay. This episode had basically three completely unconnected plots - the Spock/red angel-mystery, Tilly's weird spore friend, and the main part of the episode: Picking up all the loose pieces from last seasons crappy Klingon war arc. What's a testament to the writers this season is - all of these plots felt like they had a clear story - a beginning, a middle, and an end - even though they were all part of (different!) ongoing storylines. Kudos!
I enjoyed the Tilly part the most, even though that was probably the shortest, and most "
nugget of a serialized arc"-part. But the acting was
damn amazing! The Burnham-Amanda-Pike arc was
okay. I loved how they all worked together. Pike first trying the official way, but putting his personal loyalty to Spock above orders and politics. I love this Pike. But it was suuuuper weird to have three characters in a room that are all intimately familiar with Spock - while us, the viewer, are
completely baffled
who the hell THIS Spock is? It sure as hell ain't Nimoy or Quinto-Spock! It's basically a complete page-one re-write of Star Trek's famoust character. In a B-plot of a spin-off show. And I don't like that.
As for the Klingon arc: I thought it was surprisingly well done. I liked the
results more than the plot itself. But even then - This was much, much better "insight" into Klingon politics than at any point during season 1 at all! I'm still not a fan - The make-up is still severly hindering the actors from acting, and MAN do I HATE the voice-modulation! Together with the prosthetic-teeth, I barely understood them! That was shit. But the main storyline was okay - typical Klingon stuff, and I really like all the subtle retooling they made to make them appear "Klingon" again.
Stuff I liked:
- Tilly's breakdown was DAMN well acted! Mary Wiseman's performance overall this episode had blown me away - especially since I thought she was becoming too over the top the last two episodes. I was positively shocked
- I love the "lie" that solved the Klingon conflict - that Kor "saved" L'Rell and gave his life to protect her, and to unite the Empire. That was a really clever solution!
- FUCKING MONGOL BEARDS. Those are truly Klingons again! Also, the change was adressed with just one, tiny line of dialogue. Perfect.
- The direction, especially the camera movements in the beginning, were very dynamic, almost JJTrek-like.
- The "spy"-stuff, S31 (which now is the regular Federation intelligence... yeah
) was surprisingly low-key. They helped to prop up L'Rell, to keep the peace. Not really the nice way, but considering how epic the Federation failed at the war, a drastic break of the prime directive that seemed realistic, given the scenario
Neutral observations:
- "Mother of Klingons", severed heads (severed BABY head!), close-up of Papa-Kor's guts splattered on the ground - this show really tries too hard to be GoT in space, right? I'm kinda' okaay with it - it was luckily MUCH turned down from the over-the-top gore of season 1. This was a more "realistic" look at the Klingons. Still... I'm not so sure about this in a Trek show? I don't know...
- The whole Baby-plotline was a bit weird - coming out of nowhere, having massive implications, and then end right there again. But well... it was a good "personal" Mcguffin...
- ENT's Augments' Klingon retcon has now been retconned? What? (Fan theory: These "human" Klingons are still around, L'Rell integrates them back into the Empire, they're suuuper loyal to her, and thus get disproportionally placed on the super advanced D7, and therefore repeatedly run into Kirk)


Stuff I really didn't like:
- The complete retcon of Spock's backstory - this is definitely not the same character from TOS. Which really is a shame. The forced Burnham-Spock connection really hurts this series a lot IMO! Conflicts in production design are easy to ignore. But whatever this series connection to TOS is - this is really not "prime" Spock. And that is a pitty. Also: Stop with the endless teasing. No one gives a shit about "just-another" Spock! Just show your damn version.
- The Klingon speech: Prosthetics, fake teeth, and fucking voice modulation. These are actors that aren't allowed to act. DIS reallly really has a BIG problems with aliens: The Tellarite, the Klingons, the make-up is really shit. Saru is the ONLY alien on the show that actually can act - and that's purely the genius of Doug Jones! Otherwise only humans (like last week) are capable of showing emotions on this show. That's a problem.
- Fucking MU Gergiou. I really, really liked Michelle Yeoh's acting. I adore her. And she has a lot of fun playing ham. And the "freaks are more fun"-attitude for a small ship with a mission is great. Really, this would be a great concept for a reformed villain. But fucking Space Hitler?? A CANNIBAL? Someone who ordered genocide(s!)? Now working for the Federation? Are they fucking kidding me? I'd watch that show if it were "Georgious's evil clone" or something. But spy adventures starring Hitler? What?
Overall though - I really enjoyed this episode for the most part. Not as much as the last two ones. But I think they did a really, really good job cleaning the Klingon-arc mess up, and I like the new (traditional) direction they are taking them.

And the nuggets for this seasons main plot stay interesting. I'd give this episode a
7/10