It honestly worked perfectly well for me. And that's not me being an apologist. I genuinely felt emotional.
But it wasn't because I was sad to see Airiam go. It was that I was sad for the main characters who had to let her go. Sometimes I experience the emotions in drama through your direct personal connection. Other times, it's indirect through other characters.
The performances made it work for me. I can see where others might not have a care. I'm glad it just happened to work for me this time.
I thought it was cute that Detmer basically says "yay for augmentation!" When it comes up that Airiam is an augmented human.
VOY: Sesca. Other than that, no one.
Ethan Peck is definitely channeling Leonard Nimoy's Spock and I'm really enjoying his performance so far. There were moments during his argument with Michael that reminded me of TOS Spock.
It looked like one of the neverending pharmaceutical commercals to me. I was walking away to grab a snack expecting to hear "Ask Your Doctor About Airiamol" or something before we realized it was still on.When they showed the memory of Airiam and her husband right after the opening credits, I thought it was a commercial for some Caribbean vacation. Had to rewind and watch again..
9.
Even Pike gets annoyed with Tilly and gets her to get to the point. Extra points for Pike. And I like Tilly a lot.
Heh... in saying that, she pretty much, at the same time, told the Disco crew that they suck. Pretty strange thing to say about a ship with the unique ability to travel anywhere in the universe instantaneously that was ostensibly the tip of the spear during the Klingon War. Enterprise couldn’t do that.The brightest and best would survive...
USS Enterprise 1701...
Beautiful...
That said, as with others, I felt like the episode lost a lot of potential impact because Airiam was not well developed as a character. Hell, she wasn't even a character. In the first season, she was an extra. This season, she got a few more lines in earlier episodes, but wasn't even as developed as Detmer and Owo. It felt kinda like when Voyager would introduce a special guest character and then kill them off at the episode's end - which is not a good thing. Actually, it's a bit more extreme, because the episode was consciously framed largely from the POV of Airiam. Again, if they built her up as a character for the last season and a half, it would have been awesome. But I didn't get the feels with the emotional response to her death at the end. I just didn't.
It ain’t Berman either.What’s with the stupid camera spinning effects? This isn’t Batman.
Imagine if it had been someone like a Tilly in that booth. Instead, the big, dramatic ending hangs on what is basically a redshirt death.
That really took me out of the scene. Just a moment before, Pike is making sure the visuals work and checks in with everyone. As soon as the action starts, though, all that is forgotten. (Oh, and the transporter. The ship had a lock on everyone just in case … something like this happened.)I think that they left Nhan's status as a mystery so we'd think that Burnham was going to airllock Miriam only to see it was Nhan.
Ariam was someone who we see all the time, who was suddenly killed off. If someone who I see all the time suddenly dies, I'd feel something for it, even if we weren't really friends and all we ever did was say "hi" in passing. I know because it's happened to me. Ariam wasn't a main cast member, but she wasn't a stranger either.
I don't want them to kill off Tilly.
Ariam was someone who we see all the time, who was suddenly killed off. If someone who I see all the time suddenly dies, I'd feel something for it, even if we weren't friends and all we ever did was say "hi" in passing. I know because it's happened to me. Ariam wasn't a main cast member, but she wasn't a stranger either.
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