CBS needs to license someone to sell Dot-7 robot toys.

CBS needs to license someone to sell Dot-7 robot toys.
That looks like Leland actually.
She died of stupidity. As I wrote earlier. Why didnt she tie a chord to the emergency bulkhead handle and stand on the safe side of the door and pull the handle down via the cord? Oh Discovery, the suit only had power for 1 jump into the future, but somehow it made 5 back to back jumps back in time, 1 forward jump with Discovery in tow, and then was able to do one more jump backwards in time to the present just as a signal to everyone we be ok now that were stuck in the future.
I'm a little confused about this entire plotline. Why did she send the signals again? Was it to warn the crew of what was to come? Under scrutiny, this plot arc didn't make a lick of sense to me.
Yes she had to set the signals, it would have been a paradox if she had not and that is way worse than a time loop, the Borg or anything else.I'm giving this one a 7.
The action was great, the battle sequences were tremendous, but the more I think about this episode the more I feel like the writers undermined it's own show. For one, I'm confused by the entire red angel, signal plotline, which this season was based. Also, Instead of an ending shot of Discovery in the future, we get an ending shot of those remaining in the present to forget about discovery or it's death (So I guess they will kill you two different ways in Trek for violating the law). Is Discovery turning into the Pike show? They can't tell the entire cast of Discovery to move aside for Anson Mount and Rebecca Romaijn and Ethan Peck, can they? I wish the last shot of the season would have been of The Discovery in the future. It is Star Trek Discovery, after all.
If S3 opened on Pike, Spock, and Number One doing episodic missions on the Enterprise and never mentioned the Discovery, for fear of w/e, that'd be perfectly fine with me. But that'd be the radical, brave choice.
Great episode, despite some plot holes.
Don't understand how Yeoh can lead a Section31 series in the 23rd century, when Discovery just went a 1000 years into the future permanently with her onboard though...
That was always a danger when bringing in Pike and the Enterprise, they must have known it would probably overshadow Burnham and the Discovery but they couldnt ignore the opportunity it presented.That Enterprise-centric ending was like the writers lost interest in their own show.
That show won't air till after season 3..........so I guess we find out next year.Great episode, despite some plot holes.
Don't understand how Yeoh can lead a Section31 series in the 23rd century, when Discovery just went a 1000 years into the future permanently with her onboard though...
Spock states during the interrogation that they should stop the time travel experiments but yet has no issue when Kirk starts doing them. I suppose deep down he could have.
Was there an episode this season where Burnham didn't cry? Doesn't seem like it.
That was always a danger when bringing in Pike and the Enterprise, they must have known it would probably overshadow Burnham and the Discovery but they couldnt ignore the opportunity it presented.
I’m talking about that episode with the cat. They deliberately go back to that time to story Earth in the mid 1960’s.The first he does in Trek is out of desperation and under the influence. The second was an accident. The third was predestination. The fourth was to save the planet Earth. The fifth was again an accident.
I’m talking about that episode with the cat. They deliberately go back to that time to story Earth in the mid 1960’s.
Not seen the episode yet but I think staying witht he Enterprise gives them some wriggle room as to when and where Discovery will end up next season.That was a fairly satisfying - though not perfect, finale to the season.
What I Liked:
What I Disliked:
- Spock's final monologue was on point. Peck is so damn much better at delivering these monologues without making them seem overwrought than SMG is.
- I was expecting the Klingon cavalry to come in, but I enjoyed L'Rell's crowning moment of awesome, particularly the "Today is a good day to die"
- Siranna showing up, on the other hand, was totally unexpected. A bit forced honestly (how did they learn to fly Ba'ul ships so fast?) but it was still a nice touch which helped to tie Saru's arc this season in with the season arc as a whole.
- In general, I feel like the the arc tied together much more neatly than last season. The way out of the "seven signals" issue was not totally unexpected, but it was a nice answer for why we had yet to see two of them. And yeah, in retrospect - since they wrote everything towards this conclusion - I can see how each of the earlier five signals was building towards this point in the finale. They found a way to work faith back into the arc as well. So even if they made hash of the planned arc midway through the season, they managed to salvage it by the end.
- The action and VFX were overstuffed. The space battle was much more beautifully rendered than in the first season, but it was so busy that it was hard to keep track of action. And while I appreciated seeing Burnham relive the five earlier signals from her POV, it really was just episode padding.
- You mean to tell me that all you need to do in order to stop a photon torpedo from blowing up a ship is to close emergency bulkhead doors? The scene made some emotional sense (someone had to make a heroic sacrifice) but it didn't make a lick of logical sense.
- I don't understand how destroying Leland was enough to kill Control - at least locally. One would imagine AI is a distributed intelligence, and just like how he was simultaneously able to possess Leland and that mook the other week he would be able to run on the ships and within Leland at once. Not that it mattered much, since by the time Control "died" Discovery was already on its way out, but still.
- Spock telling Michael how damn special he was to him during the scene where he was stranded in the shuttlecraft was laying it on a bit thick. Not that I think it's out-of-character in any way for Spock to feel deeply for someone underneath the surface, but being that explicit and overwrought about it was just eye-rolling.
Also, I find it curious they decided to end the episode from the POV of the Enterprise crew rather than the Discovery crew. While as I said Spock's closing monologue was good, it sure gave the impression that we were going to pick up next with the Pike series rather than with Michael & company.
I’m talking about that episode with the cat. They deliberately go back to that time to story Earth in the mid 1960’s.
Not seen the episode yet but I think staying witht he Enterprise gives them some wriggle room as to when and where Discovery will end up next season.
It should be 950 years into the future and stay there but it may not.
As another earlier poster pointed out Georgiou doesnt have to end up as the head of S31, although it would cause issues with the upcoming S31 show which Georgiou is supposed to be a part of.
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