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New Short Trek: Ask Not

How Would You Rate "Ask Not"?


  • Total voters
    76
  • Poll closed .
I'm not going to rate this one as it wasn't really a self contained minisode. It was just a way to introduce an important character for this Pike/Una/Spock series or movie they don't seem ready to admit they're obviously making
 
When the test was over, there was no lingering trauma. Sidhu was just, like, okie-dokie, that was a thing. Next scene. It went straight from conflict to denouement without any catharsis. As personal as the test was, it needed an emotional release that wasn't there.
That is not as off putting as it sounds. People can find relief in different facets of traumatizing experiences if they feel there was some facet that was under control, or under their control.
 
If every Cadet is aware that at some point in their four years of training, they are going to have to deal with a "Kobayashi Maru" Event, than one could surmise that pretty much all of them would react the same way afterward.

"OOH, thank goodness I got through that!!"
;)
 
When the test was over, there was no lingering trauma. Sidhu was just, like, okie-dokie, that was a thing. Next scene. It went straight from conflict to denouement without any catharsis. As personal as the test was, it needed an emotional release that wasn't there.
Plus, while we can reasonably infer that the holographic safeties prevent the simulated explosions and flying debris from life threateningly hurting her directly, she still got forcibly hit by the "blast wave" (in this case a forcefield) and knocked down hard. This was all happening without her knowledge so she wasn't play acting like the simulation in TWoK, it really had to believably (from her perspective) knock her down, and from what we were shown it did, powerfully. So she could have internal injuries and a concussion which didn't get checked out because they took her directly to Las Vegas... I mean engineering to stare at all the pretty neon lights.
 
I gave it 1 bcs of engine room. It's not even close to canon.
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I gave it 1 bcs of engine room. It's not even close to canon.

I think a rating for a 1 should reserved for episodes like "Code of Honor", "Threshold", "Let He Who Is Without Sin", and "The Disease". Episodes that are either truly offensive or almost impossible to get through because of how painful they are to watch. If I give something a 1, it has to earn it. It has to be aggressively bad to the point where I'm struggling to not shut it off.
 
If someone's wondering why I left out "Spock's Brain", it's a special case. I don't care what anyone says, it's fun to watch. It's so bad, it's good. So I split the difference and give it a 5. :devil:
 
If someone's wondering why I left out "Spock's Brain", it's a special case. I don't care what anyone says, it's fun to watch. It's so bad, it's good. So I split the difference and give it a 5. :devil:

I agree. All the Children Shall Lead and the space hippie episode are unwatchable though.
 
Short, generic and predictable. About the only real highlight was the scene when Pike and the cadet arrive in the transporter room and meet Number One and Spock, and that just made me want a Pike spin-off even more. Seriously, I could watch an entire hour of Pike, Number One and Spock just lounging around shooting the shit and be enthralled.
 
I gave it 1 bcs of engine room. It's not even close to canon.
You folks who keep pissing and moaning about "canon" really need to learn what that term means.

Canon is whatever characters, events, places, and things TPTB deem to be officially part of a franchise. This engine room, this version of the Enterprise, and Star Trek: Discovery ARE canon.

What you fools who keep shouting "CANON VIOLATION!11!!!!" are bitching about is continuity.

Continuity is the timeline/reality/universe in which characters, events, places, and things exist. The Star Trek franchise has several continuities.

Star Trek: Discovery and the Abrams movies ARE canon. End of.

Star Trek: Discovery takes place in a continuity which reuses elements from previous shows and films and is visually different.
The Abrams movies take place in a drastically different continuity.
 
You folks who keep pissing and moaning about "canon" really need to learn what that term means.

Canon is whatever characters, events, places, and things TPTB deem to be officially part of a franchise. This engine room, this version of the Enterprise, and Star Trek: Discovery ARE canon.

What you fools who keep shouting "CANON VIOLATION!11!!!!" are bitching about is continuity.

Continuity is the timeline/reality/universe in which characters, events, places, and things exist. The Star Trek franchise has several continuities.

Star Trek: Discovery and the Abrams movies ARE canon. End of.

Star Trek: Discovery takes place in a continuity which reuses elements from previous shows and films and is visually different.
The Abrams movies take place in a drastically different continuity.

I agree with everything you say... but I think you just took his bait.
 
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