Guy's only been in three episodes thus far, and the first was devoted to his intro. Patience.I also think they've severely underutilized Elnor up to now. There's a lot to explore there.
Picard did still have a visible contusion on his head at the beginning of Family, but it's gone soon afterwards. Beverly must have given him one more treatment before he beamed down.Yep. He had regenerative bandages over his implant locations at the end of "The Best of Both Worlds, Part II(TNG)" but even those were gone by the following episode.
Could have done without the cheesy fanfare and the constant attempts at Elrond humour - hate to say this about the first Australian cast member, but he’a not much of an actor, and a bloody awful character.
Being a big Foundation fan, I could live with that.I suspect that the series Picard will end on a note like Asimov's Foundation, where Picard, the man, has established independent institutions that will preserve the values and strengths of the Federation to allow them to be preserved through chaos and, if necessary, reconstituting the Federation in the future.
Hopefully Gen Z will be to the Millennials what the Boomers were to the McCarthyists (i.e., the antidote).Actually, having looked things up after the fact, I guess she'd be a Space Gen Z-er. I dunno what the hell their bag is yet.
I hope that's not the case. I see the Federation as intrinsic to the whole concept of Star Trek, which is why I love to see them make peace with the Klingons and Romulans as time goes by. For Picard to leave the Federation would make him no better than those people who threaten to leave the country if their arch enemy wins the election. A sad ending for a superior character.I'm not seeing that. The show made a point of removing Picard from his Federation/Starfleet bubble...I don't think it'll be about ending up back there. If he effects change, it'll be from without.
That's a good thought. That should have occurred to me.They need to do more to help Raffi.
I mentioned it in my post, and a few others have, too. Don't worry about it. I'm skimming the thread, too.Am I the only one who thinks the box looks kinda like a Rubik's cube?
Her daughter was perfect in “Continues”...She's 92! Probably retired. Anyway I'm sure the Romulan Commander's spent the last decade mourning Spock anyway.
Given the pattern, I think they're likely doomed to be what we Gen Xers were, and what the "Lost Generation" between the Greatest Generation and the Boomers were before that (those who were children during WWII)...lost in the noise between more vocal/attention-dominating generations.Hopefully Gen Z will be to the Millennials what the Boomers were to the McCarthyists (i.e., the antidote).
I tend to see the Federation as being more of an alliance than a country in the first place, so I'm not suggesting that he'd be expatriating. I'm suggesting that he could be a force for good while not holding a (not the) military or government position.I hope that's not the case. I see the Federation as intrinsic to the whole concept of Star Trek, which is why I love to see them make peace with the Klingons and Romulans as time goes by. For Picard to leave the Federation would make him no better than those people who threaten to leave the country if their arch enemy wins the election. A sad ending for a superior character.
Isn't it possible that when Hugh mentioned the Romulan Queen, he was speaking figuratively?
For those who seem to have just noticed the Rubik's-like cube in this episode, we got a preview of it a few episodes back when Soji was questioning the Romulan historian lady...there were close-ups of one of the other Romulan xB patients in the ward playing with one.
That's how I see it as well. By the end of the story Picard will have saved the day and gotten his clout back. He won't reactivate his commission and be Starfleet Admiral Picard however. The show will continue to be about him and his motley crew of ex-Starfleet officers warping around the galaxy setting right what once went wrong, hoping the next leap, will be the leap home. Oh boy.I tend to see the Federation as being more of an alliance than a country in the first place, so I'm not suggesting that he'd be expatriating. I'm suggesting that he could be a force for good while not holding a (not the) military or government position.
Isn't it possible that when Hugh mentioned the Romulan Queen, he was speaking figuratively?
One thing I'm confused about -- when Narek first opens his impossible box, there's a figurine in it. So did he pop in a poison gas capsule for the next time?
I thought it was the same box, the idea was that opening it slowly and with patience gets you the figurine, rushing gets you the gas.One thing I'm confused about -- when Narek first opens his impossible box, there's a figurine in it. So did he pop in a poison gas capsule for the next time?
I thought it was the same box, the idea was that opening it slowly and with patience gets you the figurine, rushing gets you the gas.
Maybe the "kid's" version only gives you an electric shock or something. I could totally imagine as a Romulan lesson-teaching tool.That is so disturbingly the sort of lesson Romulans WOULD teach their kids I'm buying it, but I doubt Sela or Narisso would have made it into their teens if that were the case...
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