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Spoilers Star Trek: Discovery 2x09 - "Project Daedalus"

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I'm wondering if anyone would be bothered if it had been Worf who had been knocked 50 ft and then ignored for the rest of the scene.

If he was thrown into a pit of chlorine and was unable to breathe.

Could Nhan's helmet have given her an atmosphere to breathe if she had activated the helmet?

Maybe, but as it wasn't activated it would seem it was either
1) Damaged
2) Unable to do so, and only provided pressure rather than a Barzanian environment
 
I just watched the episode again and oh my the eyes got misty. I will really miss Airiam. We never really got to know her.

I felt it was a solid episode. Loved the ocean waves over the end credits. You have to either have the sound way up or just tune yourself into it. The sounds of a beach actually.
 
i'm late - only watched it last night

watched it - gave it a ten (didn't hesitate or even think about why i did that)

i'm about halfway through the threat by now and everything i marked for an answer has already been adressed

ceterume censeo: people who want everything shown onscreen lack imagination ;)
 
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2) Unable to do so, and only provided pressure rather than a Barzanian environment
I thought that as well but if you look, you’ll see she’s wearing a TOS variant one which means it’s her own personal one from the Enterprise. It should be able to do her atmosphere.
 
I largely enjoyed the ep, but the Nhan thing did bug me. I get that there were other emergencies going on, but the whole time Burnham was dealing with Airiam, and there was all urgent dialogue and back-and-forth about the airlock, part of me kept thinking "Um, remember Nhan, last seen gasping for breath a few moments ago? Maybe take a moment to check on her . . . ?"

we saw that, did she (she was kinda preoccupied, wasn't she?)?
 
Remember when Airiam asked Nhan about her breathing device?

"And that device enables you to breathe in our atmosphere?"
"Yes, why do you ask?"
"Just curious."

I suppose that even if Nhan's helmet were not damaged it would have taken way too much time to try to reprogram the suit for Barzan atmosphere. If that had even been possible. Which we don't know. So, yeah. :techman:
 
I thought it was a great episode. Ariam went from a character I didn't care about to having one of the most powerful deaths in Trek history. I know she wasn't fully developed but Jadzia Dax was and her death was crap so that is not always a factor in a great emotional death.

I’m sorry but the more times I watch the episode, the more convinced I am that this was one of the better deaths in a Trek show. Tripp, Tasha, and Data, should have had it so good.

Agree with both. This was one of best deaths ever in Trek.

I just rewatched and I think they did an amazing job of making me care about this character in just one episode. Kudos to new co-showrunner Michelle Paradise, director Frakes and actress Cheeseman, plus other actors. On rewatch I noticed Airiam replayed the memory of her honeymoon one last time before dying.:wah:
 
we saw that, did she (she was kinda preoccupied, wasn't she?)?
Yes it was all happening fast.......I think another quick cut to her trying to drag herself across the floor might have helped the flow, but it would have ruined her popping up and airlocking Airiam---but we ALL knew she was going to do it anyway. Easy to armchair direct after the fact. Still think Frakes did a wonderful job with this. One minor quibble.
 
I'm wondering if anyone would be bothered if it had been Worf who had been knocked 50 ft and then ignored for the rest of the scene.
Would I have been bothered? Yes, of course. Would it have made sense on DS9 shortly after Worf joined them, if Bashir had been desperate to save his friend O'Brien and had quickly figured that Worf's Klingon anatomy would probably mean he'd survive (analogous to Burnham seeing that Nhan still had one of her two apparatuses in) for a while? YES. Bashir didn't know Worf. O'Brien was his buddy.

Perhaps us being bothered by what was happening to Nhan was part of *the point* of the scene - an intended effect.
 
It is an interesting possibility. Do you suppose the Red Angel is just as disoriented experiencing time as Spock was dealing with the aftereffects of the mind meld? Checking here could be an attempt to orient themselves in time.
Ohhhhh maybe so. I didn't even think of that, was just doing a rewatch and the phone rang so I paused it and by chance the screen was turning red. So subtle I missed it in the previous 2 viewings.
 
Yes it was all happening fast.......I think another quick cut to her trying to drag herself across the floor might have helped the flow, but it would have ruined her popping up and airlocking Airiam---but we ALL knew she was going to do it anyway. Easy to armchair direct after the fact. Still think Frakes did a wonderful job with this. One minor quibble.
actually, i waited for a short cut seeing her touching the breezer <- is there an official name out for that thing (in german that whould be a composit noun of aproximately 28 letters)
 
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That doesn't explain why they didn't beam Airiam over post spacing of course. They did that with Voq last season after all.

The explanation seems pretty simple. Nobody but the enemy wanted Airiam to live. Everybody including Airiam wanted Airiam to die. And quickly, within the next fifteen seconds or so.

It had already been demonstrated that Airiam was a deadly threat to a great many things, with no known remedy to the situation but the one she herself proposed, that of killing her. Nobody in his or her right mind would have disagreed with that. And she clearly didn't.

Airiam had originally become an agent of evil simply by standing on the bridge of the Discovery. She could not be quarantined with any sort of certainty; locked into a frigging airlock, she was about to end the universe. Her actions were seconds short of causing Armageddon. There was no hope of a cure within that time window. And in any case, saving Airiam's body would have been futile: she had eschewed with that one once already. It was her mind that needed saving. Except here it needed killing.

The only real question here is, why didn't they fire phasers at Airiam to make sure?

Could Nhan's helmet have given her an atmosphere to breathe if she had activated the helmet?

Probably not all that easily. After all, apparently it originally and routinely didn't. We might speculate that her breathing mix is highly poisonous and couldn't be used with humans or the like nearby; dispensers of minuscule, highly concentrated doses of the vital poison would have to be used instead. To get the suit to produce the poison would require overriding lots of things, which probably was beyond Nhan's abilities at the time.

Timo Saloniemi
 
I don't know how many of you watch The Expanse, but there's a similar dynamic with a villainous character and his two daughters: one becomes defiant, the other obsessed about living up to dad's impossible standards. That kind of dysfunctional family depiction is something I personally find very compelling, as it makes for really good characterisation. One of the reasons I liked this new episode so much was how organic the conflict between Spock and Michael felt. They are both caught up in their decades-long resentment and unwilling to cede any ground. I think that at some point, they'll grow past this at least somewhat, but it's good to see a conflict that feels real and not like forced melodrama. At least that's how I see it.

let's just say: i got three brothers :techman:
 
It crossed my mind while watching that Nhan was not being paid attention. But it equally crossed my mind that perhaps the point of not showing her was to heighten the tension. Sometimes, I suppose, directors like to have multiple moving parts requiring urgent attention that the viewer has to keep in mind for a short time period to build up to the climax. After all, the viewer is thinking "Nhan could die! Why is she not being helped?" along with "Burnham doesn't know what to do! She's gonna let her in ! Nah, she has to space her! Oh no, perhaps this is the goody-two-shoes Burnham, she's going to let her in and fight off the bad virus inside her! Oh, but she's made such decisions before, maybe she spaces her and cries about it afterwards, just like in the premier." "Oh Airiam! She is practically begging to be killed! To save everyone! God the sacrifice!" "Where's the Red Angel? Why doesn't she show? WTF???"

All in good showmanship.
 
Ohhhhh maybe so. I didn't even think of that, was just doing a rewatch and the phone rang so I paused it and by chance the screen was turning red. So subtle I missed it in the previous 2 viewings.
I hadn't noticed till you mentioned it. Now, I need to rewatch and see if I missed any other scenes like that.
 
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