Or those Picard Era uniforms make the Maroons look like a flash in the pan.Tal is at least 800 years old, or at least had a previous host who liked to cosplay as a 2399 era Captain.
Nah, that rule existed only for one episode!I suspect the answer is no, but I still wonder: will the writers explore the problems of re-association with Tal via Head Gray?
The relationship between Head Gray and Adira has the potential to be tense, perhaps creepy, though still interesting. In this episode, yes, it's beautiful that Adira could incorporate the Tal symbiont and preserve the memories of Gray. On the other hand, how does one live when another personality inside one's mind cannot be shut off? Is it fair to someone who wants to fall in love (or lust, for that matter)? Jadzia could largely keep the past hosts in check (save for Joran, whose memories were suppressed). On the other hand, Ezri, who did not come through the Trill initiate program, struggled to differentiate her own impulses from those of her hosts. She was obviously haunted by Jadia's relationship with Worf. That said, Ezri did not seem to have experienced involuntary reappearances of those hosts. I'm not sure that the Head Gray story is going to be all that simple, and yet may find other ways of being tragic.I really enjoyed this episode, it was a real punch to the gut when I worked out Grey was going to die and would be the previous host for Adira's symbiont. I think Grey's appearance at the end is interesting, we've certainly had glimpses into what that relationship is like for a joined person. This is another level and explores that more, and can easily be explained as a result of the trauma. If I followed correctly, Grey's joining was recent and he and Adira were still adjusting to it, so there may well be a sense of loss for the symbiont to know a being so entirely for such a short time. To then join with someone who knew and loved that last host, it's not a surprise that's something that would manifest itself. I think that's a very sad, very beautiful thread to Adira's story. They watched their love die, and now possesses his memories of his love for her as well as her own memories of the same time.
Seems like things behind the camera are finally not chaotic. There really needs to be a book about season one. i think there was more drama going on offscreen than on.Where was this writing in season one? If it had been like thing from the beginning I would have liked it more
It was scripted. Culber screwed it up on purpose to let people about screwing up as wellI have a hankering suspicion that Culber's haiku messup was a real one - aka, a blooper... and they just decided to keep it in.
That rule didn't last long since Picard gets assigned to a covert ops mission.
Right, everybody loved it...The spontaneous haikus seemed a bit forced in general, but Detmer’s haiku was so dark, so odd, so flat-out weird that I wondered why none of the other characters found it strange, especially considering her bizarre delivery.
I don't know what you mean - picture?Did anyone else notice what looked like CGI blurring around Adira's boyfriend's jaw?
The looks on their faces tell me other wise.but Detmer’s haiku was so dark, so odd, so flat-out weird that I wondered why none of the other characters found it strange
Which may be something people are doing offscreen or during montage sequences (like the one in this very episode).Who says they have to save the Federation on their own? They are currently reaching out to allies and working to figure things out. Do we just want a library episode of them sifting through records?
anyone else notice that the sphere device they put in the pool had the Trill emblem on it?
Trekcore has similar concerns:https://www.syfy.com/syfywire/star-...tion-is-both-groundbreaking-and-heartbreaking
Interesting op-ed on the killing of Gray.
http://blog.trekcore.com/2020/11/star-trek-discovery-review-forget-me-not/There’s much more to Gray as a character, though, than how his death serves the plot, but I worry that rendering a trans character literally invisible within minutes of his introduction undermines the representational value of including him in the first place.
While there’s reason to expect he’ll return beyond this episode (though we’ve not yet seen past the first four episodes of the season), it’s hard not to see killing off a character played by the Star Trek franchise’s first explicitly-transgender actor is a pretty serious hurdle for some viewers to get past.
Still stupid.which is not at all a regular away mission and came very late in the show.
Trekcore has similar concerns:
http://blog.trekcore.com/2020/11/star-trek-discovery-review-forget-me-not/
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