• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Spoilers Star Trek: Discovery 2x10 - "The Red Angel"

Hit it!


  • Total voters
    237
No offense to anyone, but it's kind of easy to "prove" you're worthy of replacing someone who barely had any development up until her death episode.
With in the fiction of DISCO, Airiam was well known and well liked by many people. Those are the people she has to prove her worth too. That would happen through action and dialog in new episodes and would not be dependant on how much screentime or dialog Airiam had in previous episodes.
 
What? You mean she’ll become her own great-grandmother?
Yeah, with Tyler. Sisko was part Klingon all along.
With in the fiction of DISCO, Airiam was well known and well liked by many people. Those are the people she has to prove her worth too. That would happen through action and dialog in new episodes and would not be dependant on how much screentime or dialog Airiam had in previous episodes.
That's fine within the reality of the show, but does nothing for the audience. A fictional character trying to live up to the memory of a fictional character the audience barely knows is often times dramatically a dead end.

That's why Star Wars was changed from Luke trying to live up to a guy mentioned in 1 line of dialogue to trying to live up to the enemy he knows (and the audience knows) and has been fighting all along.
 
Remember, Prophets don´t believe in "first" or "later".
Sisko: Hi everyone, I'm back!
Discovery crew: Where did you come from? Who are you?
Sisko: Oops, miscalculated my return time by a century or so. Never mind (suddenly disappears)
(Discovery crew shrug their shoulders and return to what they were doing)

Sisko later shows up out of nowhere in the Picard show.
 
Sisko: Hi everyone, I'm back!
Discovery crew: Where did you come from? Who are you?
Sisko: Oops, miscalculated my return time by a century or so. Never mind (suddenly disappears)
(Discovery crew shrug their shoulders and return to what they were doing)

Sisko later shows up out of nowhere in the Picard show.

That makes it sound like Sisko has become a baby Q or something.
 
That's fine within the reality of the show, but does nothing for the audience. A fictional character trying to live up to the memory of a fictional character the audience barely knows is often times dramatically a dead end.
I guess I will remain the outlier on this one because I find these things both emotionally moving and dramatically engaging.
 
That's fine within the reality of the show, but does nothing for the audience. A fictional character trying to live up to the memory of a fictional character the audience barely knows is often times dramatically a dead end.
Only if the acting and writing don't support the idea. The audience learns to love, hate and sympathize with a character in anywhere from a half hour or more all the time on TV and in film. It's kind of what fiction does.
 
That's fine within the reality of the show, but does nothing for the audience. A fictional character trying to live up to the memory of a fictional character the audience barely knows is often times dramatically a dead end.

There are numerous Flims and TV series which deal with the fall out of the death a character the audience never knows except through the people who are mourning them and the fictional characters trying to life up to them, and this is often very dramatically effective.

And as a matter of fact, now that we know who Michael Burnham's mother is, even though we no very little about her and just meet her at the end of this ep, we also now know a whole lot more about Michael herself and can surmise a lot of the reasons she is who she is even if she died right there on the spot that tiny bit of insight would have left us miles along the road to understanding Michael more fully.
 
There are numerous Flims and TV series which deal with the fall out of the death a character the audience never knows except through the people who are mourning them and the fictional characters trying to life up to them, and this is often very dramatically effective.

And as a matter of fact, now that we know who Michael Burnham's mother is, even though we no very little about her and just meet her at the end of this ep, we also now know a whole lot more about Michael herself and can surmise a lot of the reasons she is who she is even if she died right there on the spot that tiny bit of insight would have left us miles along the road to understanding Michael more fully.
Fair enough, although I'm not really feeling much of anything regarding Burnham's mother right now.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top