Ho boy, now that was a shocking twist at the end. I didn't expect Jurati to turn on us so early. Whatever Oh had shown her, it must have been horrific. I still feel sick in the stomach from thinking what Maddox's last seconds must have been like, being murdered by his own girlfriend as she stands crying over him.
The entire episode, or even this entire series has a very robust backbone in the concept of self-perceived failure and abandonment gnawing at everyone from within. Be it Picard abandoning the Romulans and Raffi after Starfleet shelving the rescue effort, Raffi abandoning her family in her obsessive pursuit of Romulan conspiracies and her substance abuse, Rios beating himself up for whatever happened to the captain of the ibn Majid, and now we've learned about Seven's colossal guilt over her perceived responsibility for Icheb's death because she had put him in Bjayzl's crosshairs. It was heartbreaking to see her so utterly bitter and
broken. And of course, I believe Jurati's going to be consumed by her guilt over her actions very soon. Especially if it turns out that Oh had lied to her. Will her arc end with a heroic self-sacrifice or giving herself up to the authorities, I wonder?
Overall, I've found Picard and Raffi are much more similar than they are willing to admit to each other, and they both contribute to the thematic basis of the series: that you can't just walk out on the people who are counting on you without consequences. Nor can you simply pop back into their lives and expect everything to be as if nothing happened. Life goes on without you, and now that Raffi has seen the consequences of this as well, she has nowhere else to go than with Picard (of course she could go back to her cabin on Earth to waste her life away, but I think she knows very well that it would be the exact same thing she resents Picard for). Her scene with her son Gabriel tore open quite a lot of old personal wounds; even though my parents were physically living with me, every word he said about parental abandonment was intimately and painfully familiar. But I'm glad he has found happiness on his own. Sometimes it's better that way.
I loved Freecloud, and I found it quite believable that such wretched hives of scum and villainy could exist just outside the Federation's reach. Based on the ads, I first described it as Sealand crossed with Pirate Tortuga, but with all the shiny neon signs everywhere, maybe Nar Shaddaa would be a more apt comparison. Only the Hutt were missing. But I absolutely loved how Quark and Mr. Mot both had the same idea to start franchising. The costumes on Freecloud looked like they were lifted straight out of The Fifth Element, and their unhinged, colorful extravagance was quite fitting for such an insane place.
Little observations:
- I just loved to hate all those Freecloud ads. Especially the personalized ones like the one Raffi got. Data harvesting is just that much easier in the 24th century, isn't it? Seeing all this, I'd vow to avoid Freecloud by at least a parsec forever... seriously, I just saw ads on my social media for a brand of beer we've merely discussed during our lunch break. Again.
- As I looked up the Annari makeup from Voyager, their forehead ridges and skin color looked quite similar to how the new Beta Annari look. Maybe they're a Beta Quadrant subspecies? We've met the Annari in VOY Season 7, they were quite close to the Beta Quadrant by then. But still, I loved how Vup still wore a 24th approximation of a pinstripe business suit. I was always fond of aliens wearing human clothes.
- Elnor is absolutely adorable with his childlike glee at witnessing his first ruse, "I don't know how to not be Elnor." and "Are we still pretending?" He's almost like what Data would've been like if he had his emotion chip from the beginning.