Here's an interesting take on the, uh, climactic events of the finale:
https://hugoclub.blogspot.com/2020/04/the-phoenix-farce.html
https://hugoclub.blogspot.com/2020/04/the-phoenix-farce.html
I will probably regret wading in to this particular minefield but it is something I have thought about quite a bit, probably since Firefly.Here's an interesting take on the, uh, climactic events of the finale:
https://hugoclub.blogspot.com/2020/04/the-phoenix-farce.html
As I get older I get more accepting of this idea. That death doesn't require this big dramatic presentation, but is more important what the person chooses in that moment. I understand that this is dramatic medium but there is an overemphasis on long drawn out death and speech, rather than what the character would actually be going through.In hindsight I didn't really mind Kirk dying underneath a collapsed bridge on an uninhabited planet trying to save 230 million pre-industrial humanoids on the neighboring planet. His only help was Picard and they were both successful. Kirk died as he wanted: making a difference.
It wasn't an overly dramatic, drawn-out death but it was a fitting one for a man who'd lived his adult life and Starfleet career trying to make a difference. He succeeded.
Here's an interesting take on the, uh, climactic events of the finale:
https://hugoclub.blogspot.com/2020/04/the-phoenix-farce.html
I wish the death of Picard was the last episode of the series, having his death and rebirth in less time that it takes to cook porridge cheapened the scene.
Honest to goodness I swear I experience stories differently than most. I have yet to watch a story or read a book where the main character stays dead. It doesn't cheapen it if they, the characters, don't know they are going to survive, in my opinion.It makes the stories less compelling and meaningful if there's no consequences for these characters actions.
Honest to goodness I swear I experience stories differently than most. I have yet to watch a story or read a book where the main character stays dead.
It doesn't cheapen it if they, the characters, don't know they are going to survive, in my opinion.
Can't stand the Terminator and the Titanic is overrated. Apologies to my wife.Seriously? You must have a very specific diet of fiction.
Hopefully James Cameron stops fooling around with terminators and avatars and finishes production of Titanic 2: Jack's Back.
That's the problem. They're relying on the same worn out tropes, like a crutch. Maybe they should try something different in order to get a strong emotional response from the viewer. We're supposed to be moving away from the reset-button style of storytelling but apparently not.And, I realized I phrase my statement quite poorly. I should say that stories like Star Trek where the main character stays dead. Even SW gets around this with Force ghosts.
And that's another problem. It becomes predictable.Point is-I'm not expecting anyone to stay dead in Star Trek and the idea that them not staying dead "cheapens" death comes across as very, well, cheap.
Eh, maybe...I don't know. When I'm in the moment and watching those characters I don't care that it is a trope. I'm invested with the characters and their experience. For me, that is enough.That's the problem. They're relying on the same worn out tropes, like a crutch. Maybe they should try something different in order to get a strong emotional response from the viewer. We're supposed to be moving away from the reset-button style of storytelling of TNG but apparently not.
And that's another problem. It becomes predictable.
Trip’s still dead.
Too soon?
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.