Yes, how dare we discuss different facets of the human condition through fictional characters. The horror.Oh for the days when I never dreamed this conversation would be possible. Thanks, Kurtzman.
Yes, how dare we discuss different facets of the human condition through fictional characters. The horror.Oh for the days when I never dreamed this conversation would be possible. Thanks, Kurtzman.
Yes, how dare we discuss different facets of the human condition through fictional characters. The horror.
Please speak for yourself. I have enjoyed it, have gone through introspection and exploration. I'm sorry others are not enjoying it but I find it highly engaging.Yes, the best way to have a nuanced discussion of the human condition is through silly cartoon characters that exaggerate humanity at its worst.
Can anyone here seriously say they have been enriched by the endless arguing about this? The cartoonishness was gets in the way of serious discussion, not facilitates it. It’s goofy nonsense that deliberately avoids any worthwhile introspection.
Please speak for yourself. I have enjoyed it, have gone through introspection and exploration. I'm sorry others are not enjoying it but I find it highly engaging.
And, yes, nuanced discussions can come from cartoon characters. Humanity has done that for ages. Yet, somehow Darth Vader is redeemable in a fictional world, while Georgiou, in a series that purports that humanity can evolve and become better, is not.
Yes, I have found this conversation highly enlightening as to others attitudes towards redemption for human beings.
I'd like more too, but I'm ok with we don't get it.If Darth Vader is the benchmark, I guess one could argue The Way to Eden had some really deep thoughts on the countercultural movement.
Seriously, the SW films are the definition of popcorn entertainment. I don’t look to them for philosophy, and I’d like more from Star Trek.
Yes, I'm laughing the whole time...Mirror, Mirror was interesting because Mirror Spock twas willing to defy the silly tropes of his universe. He was a 3D character in a 2D world. Mirror Georgiou is precisely the opposite of that. But hey, she’s funny.
Yes, I'm laughing the whole time...
Mirror Spock doesn't work now because he is irredeemable by the standards laid out for Georgiou. I wonder if Mirror Spock would be treated the same.![]()
Agree to disagree. Humanity is ugly.No, MU Spock works because the potential for better was baked into him from the get-go. He was not good or bad, just a product of his world. That’s precisely why he’s the lynchpin of the episode. Georgiou, on the other hand, was played as a silly, eeeevil cartoon, and now they are trying to retrofit some nuance on her, while still indulging in the uglier appeals of her character.
Yet, somehow Darth Vader is redeemable in a fictional world...
Comics would disagree.Who said he was redeemed? The only person we see interact with him is Luke. I doubt the Rebels would’ve hired him if he had survived.
Agree to disagree. Humanity is ugly.
Yoda and Obiwan didn't exactly give him the boot when the 3 of them were chilling in their celestial photo op at the end.Who said he was redeemed? The only person we see interact with him is Luke. I doubt the Rebels would’ve hired him if he had survived.
Agreed. But we don't become better by saying we don't have a dark side, an ugly side. We don't improve ourselves by excluding people we seem not to be good enough.That’s exactly the opposite of the message that has sustained the franchise for 50+ years, IMO.
Who said he was redeemed? The only person we see interact with him is Luke. I doubt the Rebels would’ve hired him if he had survived.
Georgiou wasn't taught it. The Federation offers a new opportunity to learn.He does get to be a kindly Force ghost, doesn’t he? But even if you want to spend much time thinking about that, which I don’t, it’s a Christian redemption image in that all sins can be forgiven if you renounce your evil ways before death. He wasn’t standing smirking about all his awesome light saber kills.
Agreed. But we don't become better by saying we don't have a dark side, an ugly side. We don't improve ourselves by excluding people we seem not to be good enough.
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