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Spoilers Star Trek: Picard 1x05 - "Stardust City Rag"

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It seems cracks have appeared in the Federation. I wonder if this is the beginning of the end that will eventuate with whatever form the Federation is in Discovery S3? It can take centuries for civilisations to fall after certain events, just as it can happen in a matter of years.
 
The Forgotten/Deborged Drones aren't seen as sentient creatures worthy of empathy and respect. That's the entire point of that scene. She's treating him like a pig being dissected for its parts, something to be harvested and exploited for financial gain. Not to put too fine a point on it, but there are attitudes like that here and now, in the real world, and directed toward feeling, thinking human beings.
The villains don't care at all about respecting Icheb. But the fact of the matter is it's still a lot harder to operate on a thrashing, fighting victim than an unconscious one.

If someone wanted to rip a microchip out from inside a dog, would you leave him conscious so he can bite you or maul you? Or wouldn't you logically knock him out first?
 
The villains don't care at all about respecting Icheb. But the fact of the matter is it's still a lot harder to operate on a thrashing, fighting victim than an unconscious one.

If someone wanted to rip a microchip out from inside a dog, would you leave him conscious so he can bite you or maul you? Or wouldn't you logically knock him out first?
Not if you want him to suffer. He didn't seem to have much capability of fighting her, so it's possibly he had been subdued in other ways, while making him fully aware of the pain he was feeling. There have been examples all through history of groups and individuals causing as much human suffering as possible during experiments, in order to see how the human body reacts to such stress. Ghastly, barbaric experiments that were nonetheless performed, often at the behest of a government. This is someone doing it for profit, so it is likely any ethics that would exist were thrown out the window long before any actual cutting began.
 
I’ll admit to being on the fence about this series up til this episode. This one has finally won me over. Still not 100% sure about the big story arc making any sense, but at least we aren’t needlessly hanging around the Borg cube watching the most forced/cold on screen relationship since Voq/Burnham develop. And the actions of each individual are coming into their own and starting to make sense and developing nicely. Really liked the way they used seven.

I didn’t get the sense that Jurati was acting under duress or psychic manipulation; only that she felt she had to kill an old friend/lover for some as yet unknown reason. Not sure she is ‘bad’, so much as she knows info crucial to the plot that we are not privy to and it is affecting her actions. I was sure there was going to be a stupid evil ‘big bad’ in this series based on the scruffy Romulan on the cube, but now I am not sure that there will be, and that is what I think won me over. Shades of gray and competing motivations all well-intentioned make for much better tv than “this guy/cause is pure evil!”, which I think cheapens plots more than helps them.
 
Tbh I don't think its comparable I didn't want recast for these characters especially the way they built up Maddox but the episode was good the only episode I liked so far.
Ok, then Saavik. Is there great outcry over that?
The Forgotten/Deborged Drones aren't seen as sentient creatures worthy of empathy and respect. That's the entire point of that scene. She's treating him like a pig being dissected for its parts, something to be harvested and exploited for financial gain. Not to put too fine a point on it, but there are attitudes like that here and now, in the real world, and directed toward feeling, thinking human beings.
Those attitudes will be there for a while. Humans are very good at making other people less than themselves.
 
Here’s my complaint about the gore: It’s often symptomatic of simplistic and juvenile writing. Torture scenes like we got here, and similar scenes in Discovery, are a cheap way to inspire a wince and a boo-hiss from the audience. Here we have a character who not only steals body parts (evil but believable) but delights in causing the most pain and suffering possible while doing so, for no apparent reason other than to be eeeevul. That tips it into the cartoonish, and I’m not interested in cartoonishly eeeevul any more than I am in saintly characters who are never challenged in doing the right thing. Trek should be past black hats. Khan is a great bad guy not because he is “bad” but because he has understandable motivations and acts in accordance with them.
This was my only complaint about this episode, and the only thing that kept me from giving it a ten. The intro was way over the top gory, and for no good reason than to say “look, this lady is baaaddd!” It is better to be subtle, and Seven finding Icheb’s mutilated corpse after his parts had been painlessly harvested after death would have been just as impactful. Maybe more so. But I feel like this episode pulled it off and I had almost forgotten about that scene by the end.
 
Agreed. The gore doesn't even make sense in-universe in regards to the villains. Aside from cruelty, why wouldn't they knock out Icheb to operate on him? They just enjoy making operation harder on themselves by having fighting, thrashing victims? They don't even do a basic scan to see there's no cortical node? They use such primitive sawing tools to pry out highly valuable Borg parts, risking damage to them, instead of scanning them and beaming them out methodically?


The gang is cheap and the techs probably don't have much in the way of medical training (too expensive and difficult to come by in the Neutral Zone).
 
It seems cracks have appeared in the Federation. I wonder if this is the beginning of the end that will eventuate with whatever form the Federation is in Discovery S3? It can take centuries for civilisations to fall after certain events, just as it can happen in a matter of years.
800 years is too much and it hampers anything they might want to do in that time frame.
 
Prefacing this by saying I still like the show. But more and more this is feeling like just another generic sci-fi show and not Star Trek. It’s just missing...something.

Sometimes there is a spark and you can see something there, like the last exchange between Seven and Picard.

and why, between this and Discovery does there always have to be a big bad pulling the strings from behind the scenes.

as for this episode, I didn’t mind the violence or how Seven acts. She’s acting human the best way she knows how.

Killing off Icheb seemed unnecessary.

the costumes Picard, Rios and Elnor were wearing seemed totally like something we would have seen Kirk, Spock and McCoy be forced into.

Liked the shoutouts to Quark.

hated Raffi’s subplot.
 
depends on the fiction. Sometimes a meaningless death has more impact or brings the author's point better across.
Agree. The novel “the naked and the dead” has a lot of meaningless death, but is one of the better books on the senselessness of war that has ever been written (IMHO). Meaningless death can be quite powerful.
 
I'll do my best to respect a different point of view

Meant to say earlier, but I genuinely appreciate this. Nice to have a respectful conversation about this sort of thing, even if we aren't completely in sync about it.

And that's why I am on boards like this. I give precisely zero chits about spoilers and it is helpful to have another perspective for people who (like yourself) are more sensitive.

Would have liked that for the Witcher...grotesque series at times. However, I do like your idea. But, that tries to account for people are sensitive to the same thing. As I stated before, would we put similar ratings on Conspiracy, Star Trek III or Star Trek VI?

While I'm guessing there would be less demand for parental guides for the older stuff, I agree it would be nice to have it out there, especially for examples like the ones you mentioned. In addition to parental guidance notes, there are probably those who would appreciate other "trigger warnings" as well I'm sure.

Though if we're including older material I'm wondering if a wiki might be a more effective format than the boards, but that sounds like a much bigger project.
 
Are you kidding me? I meet 7 year olds who have watched rated R films. I have noted people letting their kids watch "Alien" before under the age of 10. More and more kids I meet are exposed to more and more than I ever was as a child.

It may not be my preference but I'm not going to pretend that this somehow new.

My then 9 year old nephew visited me last year and I showed him some episodes from Avatar The Last Airbender. And then he couldn't fall asleep for quite some time that night and according to his own words because of the series. It seems something in it has disturbed him and that despite being some years older than the minimum recommended age for watching it. Not all children are alike.

PIC is clearly not aimed at young kids at all. The TV rating is more than clear in this regard. So I think it is really irresponsible of CBS to advertise it using a 7 years old. Some parents might see it and think if this boy is fine watching it, it can't be so brutal and my kids will be fine with it, too. But that doesn't have to be the case, because as I said before all kids are different. They should follow their own TV rating and advertise it accordingly.
 
I feel like it was thematic. This is not the Federation, or indeed the galaxy that we remember from TNG. It has changed, and not for the better. The very things that once made Picard a "great" man, his morals, his sense of righteousness, his almost boundless faith in humanity and the ideals of the Federation have become almost anachronistic. This is a a cruel, harsh universe. A place not of utopian ideals but of pragmatic, often morally compromised solutions. Seven is used as counterpoint to Picard. Somebody who has faced the same failures, the same kind of heartbreaking loss. But where it has challenged his faith, buried it, it has shattered hers.

Put another way, Seven has changed with the universe around her. Picard is still trying to change it instead. At the heart of this episode is the core idea that this faithless, dangerous galaxy devours everyone it touches. Seven, Raffi, even Jurati (who wishes she didn't know whatever it is she knows). But so far it hasn't devoured Picard. In spite of everything he's been through, some by his own doing, he still somehow clings to that faith. He's damaged but not broken.

At the end of the day, I feel like that's sort of the pillar they've built the show on. Will the universe finally break Picard, or can he find a way to bend it back towards optimism and hope in some small way. Can you be a righteous man in unrighteous times?

Seven: After they brought you back from your time in the Collective, do you honestly feel that you've regained your humanity?
Picard: Yes.
Seven: All of it?
Picard: No. But we're both working on it, aren't we?
Seven: Every damn day of my life.

Seven's attitude may well be something along the lines of Michael Corleone's ("It's not personal. This is business."). She really knows how to compartmentalize.
 
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