I was not a fan of much of Discovery Season 1 because I felt it was messy, overdramatic and the ties Spock weird. I liked the revamp in Season 2 very much, but really Season 3 is the start of the "real" show as far as I'm concerned. And it's so strange, that I looked forward to Star Trek Picard so much, and now, I can't wait to see what happens next on Discovery far more. I'm interested in the sunset of the 24th century story, but being I want to know so much more about the 32nd Century now. Discovery really saved itself by running far away from the old canon and writing new entries. I think what sold that to me more than anything was Unification III and "Ni'var", which I think is one of Trek's best episodes since TNG.
It would've been so much better for me if she actually died because she didn't even consider checking if Keyla was dead. I kept expecting her to get back up and shoot Landry in the back until Burnham turned out to be waiting for her around the corner.Landry dies in every universe. Usually because she does something stupid.
Dunno if anyone has mentioned this yet, but Georgiou's temporal sickness harks back to TOS: All Our Yesterdays. In it, a people had escapedan ice agetheir star going nova by building a time machine andmoving 3000 yearsgoing where they wanted in the past. Their cell structure and brain patterns needed to be altered to survive the time displacement. The Enterprise crew, who did the jump without the preparation, were going to die in a matter of hours.
The Discovery's jump was shorter so the rest of the crew can (apparently) adapt, but the Emperor had the added burden of being from another universe.
I'm very glad that some people are coming around to the series, but I wonder if the change in direction is, rather than "saving" the show, risking driving away established fans to appeal to those who are not.
And you're not the first.You know if each atom of Georgiou's body has a different "quantum signature" the moment she came in "our universe" as is said in the series and TNG as well. The longer she stays, the more she eats and eliminates, which means replacing atoms from her body (from the MU) with atoms from our universe. In fact since she's been in our universe for nearly two years, it's likely that more than half of the atoms of her body are from our universe... Just sayin'...
I strongly suspect that safe will be their course, whether it is the best story choice or not. So, Trek's relevance will be relegated back to nostalgia targeting without any largely movement in new directions.
I heard that in Matt Decker''s voice.To be fair to the Discovery creatives, “new” doesn’t last forever. Season one stuck to tried-and-true Trek tropes, giving us Klingons, Harry Mudd and the MU. A lot of what was “new” then — serialization, a little more “adult” content, more diversity — is still with us; it’s just not new any more.
I heard that in Matt Decker''s voice.![]()
That's pretty much his jam.A shellshocked Matt Decker?![]()
this is all good and right with today’s physics, but in Star Trek the universe works at a subatomic level and who knows if whatever is there gets replaced during someone’s body functions?You know if each atom of Georgiou's body has a different "quantum signature" the moment she came in "our universe" as is said in the series and TNG as well. The longer she stays, the more she eats and eliminates, which means replacing atoms from her body (from the MU) with atoms from our universe. In fact since she's been in our universe for nearly two years, it's likely that more than half of the atoms of her body are from our universe... Just sayin'...
That is a fair point and I appreciate the new that has come, aside from the walking back of the Klingons. Just add more diversity to the Empire.To be fair to the Discovery creatives, “new” doesn’t last forever. Season one stuck to tried-and-true Trek tropes, giving us Klingons, Harry Mudd and the MU. A lot of what was “new” then — serialization, a little more “adult” content, more diversity — is still with us; it’s just not new any more.
I'm finding the opposite. I loved S1 and found S2 strong though a little weaker, and have found S3 all over the place - with Unification III being particularly bad. My partner, who also greatly enjoyed the first two seasons, is actively disliking this one.
I'm very glad that some people are coming around to the series, but I wonder if the change in direction is, rather than "saving" the show, risking driving away established fans to appeal to those who are not. Of those in the latter category, there are plenty who will not give it another chance, so the appeal may be wasted.
Discovery could have gone in a ton of directions and I think the 32nd century move and the Burn were poor choices.Of course all of this is my opinion. I've been criticized in the past because I would have preferred the writers had gone different directions, that I should just admit that I "don't like Discovery," which isn't the case at all.
Yes.Control
No.Section 31
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