Seven of Nine: (scanning Rios) Heartbeat is all wrong. His body temperature is--Picard, this man is a Klingon.What I don’t understand is, why is Rios channeling his inner Logan when meeting Picard for the first time?
Seven of Nine: (scanning Rios) Heartbeat is all wrong. His body temperature is--Picard, this man is a Klingon.What I don’t understand is, why is Rios channeling his inner Logan when meeting Picard for the first time?
Because he is meeting a legendary Starfleet hero that he desperately does not want to be impressed by, having spent the last however many years trying to distance himself from everything Starfleet and Picard represent, since he feels betrayed by the organisation he once believed in so strongly (whose stated ideals he clearly does still believe in, despite himself). Not to mention that, as we later learn, he has daddy issues and a history of projecting those issues onto stalwart Starfleet father figures in the Picard mould, which he very much does not want to happen again here. So what we see of Rios in that scene is partly genuine cynicism and apathy, but mostly overcompensation, an attempt to demonstrate to this legendary Starfleet hero just how much Rios doesn't care that he is a legendary Starfleet hero. He's trying to accept the job (the scene with Enoch makes clear that the chance to work with Picard is something he is excited about, deep down) while establishing clear boundaries, as a form of self-protection.What I don’t understand is, why is Rios channeling his inner Logan when meeting Picard for the first time?
What's an "inner Logan"?What I don’t understand is, why is Rios channeling his inner Logan when meeting Picard for the first time?
Rios: Hey bub! Snikt! I'm the best there is at what I do, but what I do best isn't very nice!What's an "inner Logan"?
Rios stabbed himself in the shoulder just for all of this? And I thought the Klingons had issues with their painsticks.Because he is meeting a legendary Starfleet hero that he desperately does not want to be impressed by, having spent the last however many years trying to distance himself from everything Starfleet and Picard represent, since he feels betrayed by the organisation he once believed in so strongly (whose stated ideals he clearly does still believe in, despite himself). Not to mention that, as we later learn, he has daddy issues and a history of projecting those issues onto stalwart Starfleet father figures in the Picard mould, which he very much does not want to happen again here. So what we see of Rios in that scene is partly genuine cynicism and apathy, but mostly overcompensation, an attempt to demonstrate to this legendary Starfleet hero just how much Rios doesn't care that he is a legendary Starfleet hero. He's trying to accept the job (the scene with Enoch makes clear that the chance to work with Picard is something he is excited about, deep down) while establishing clear boundaries, as a form of self-protection.
And then, of course, the rest of the season goes on to prove clearly just how much of a front that was, because as Picard immediately realised, Rios is in fact Starfleet through and through.
I have no doubt the injury was an accident. We know the ship was undergoing repairs at the time of his meeting with Picard. I was talking about his attitude, which so many have critiqued in that scene, since apparently they are more interested in drawing superficial comparisons with other characters from other franchises than in understanding this character in this context.Rios stabbed himself in the shoulder just for all of this? And I thought the Klingons had issues with their painsticks.
I have no doubt the injury was an accident. We know the ship was undergoing repairs at the time of his meeting with Picard. I was talking about his attitude, which so many have critiqued in that scene, since apparently they are more interested in drawing superficial comparisons with other characters from other franchises than in understanding this character in this context.
True.I have no doubt the injury was an accident. We know the ship was undergoing repairs at the time of his meeting with Picard. I was talking about his attitude, which so many have critiqued in that scene, since apparently they are more interested in drawing superficial comparisons with other characters from other franchises than in understanding this character in this context.
NoWait, but why do you take this so seriously? It’s just Star Trek.
Anyway, the point is that more than a few people working on the show must have watched Hugh Jackman as Logan and could’ve easily said, “You know… don’t you think this lighting up a cigar without fussing over a shrapnel wound feels a bit like budget Logan, especially since we’re introducing the character and need to start with a unique impression? Suppose he’s just reading his book as in this later scene?”
Not really, no. Feels like a stereotypical old war veteran tough guy routine. See Liam Neeson's character in "Kingdom of Heaven" talking about fighting for three days with an arrow through his testicle.Wait, but why do you take this so seriously? It’s just Star Trek.
Anyway, the point is that more than a few people working on the show must have watched Hugh Jackman as Logan and could’ve easily said, “You know… don’t you think this lighting up a cigar without fussing over a shrapnel wound feels a bit like budget Logan, especially since we’re introducing the character and need to start with a unique impression? Suppose he’s just reading his book as in this later scene?”
Also those who insist Logan must be the main source for this character type, are just revealing their own tiny frame of reference.
Not really, no. Feels like a stereotypical old war veteran tough guy routine. See Liam Neeson's character in "Kingdom of Heaven" talking about fighting for three days with an arrow through his testicle.
So Rios is putting on airs to give an impression? Yup, more stereotype.That’s just talking, but this is seeing, and also we learn by the end of the episode that Rios has never been anything like that; the first impression evaporates into a puff of smoke and then we forget all about it.
So Rios is putting on airs to give an impression? Yup, more stereotype.
Ok. Not sure what he gains by it but that's the nature of the business I suppose.He’d be putting him on is what I’m saying.
Like reality, until the holodeck malfunctions.Hmm...that makes me wonder what video games look like in Star Trek...
So much for the animated adventures of Captain John Crichton.Like reality, until the holodeck malfunctions.
Point is the character type loner Captain navigator/hauler, hard traveled, hard drinking, hard living, look, attitude, (from siren-lured Greek navigators of myth to Melville, Hemingway , to the pulps and westerns, Bogey, Eastwood), (cigar chomping see Che, or if you prefer comics any hardboiled cigar chomping Kirby to Sterenko character), etc. all well predate and exceed the derivative Logan.Anyway, the point is that more than a few people working on the show must have watched Hugh Jackman as Logan and could’ve easily said, “You know… don’t you think this lighting up a cigar without fussing over a shrapnel wound feels a bit like budget Logan, especially since we’re introducing the character and need to start with a unique impression?
... someone should’ve pointed out the obvious comparison and suggested how to remove it precisely because it’s so obvious. “Y’know, how about we don’t do this?”
”
So Rios is putting on airs to give an impression? Yup, more stereotype.He’d be putting him on is what I’m saying.
Yet we find out the truth, of course what he wants is his life back, It's called a character arc.we learn by the end of the episode that Rios has never been anything like that; the first impression evaporates into a puff of smoke and then we forget all about it.
This is the part where Famke Janssen comes in to reprise her TNG character and Geordi has a new visor that can shoot phaser beams.If Rios starts addressing Picard as "Chuck," then we'll have a problem.
Why do I take it seriously? Because I'm interested in characters and their stories. In the same way that other forum members here are seriously interested in the design intricacies of spaceships and Starfleet uniforms. Viewers are allowed to focus their interest in different areas of a show. For some, that's the technical details. For others, it's character nuance and storytelling. I'm here for the characters and their stories - I'd rather invest my energy in understanding them than worry about whether all the windows were in the right place in that three-second shot of the Enterprise we saw in Picard's dream sequence, or get stressed over the quality of CGI used to de-age Data, but I don't go around asking other fans why they care about those details. It is okay that some fans care about the technical details, and it is okay that other fans care about character stories. Rios has a story that makes sense to me, as unfolded over the course of the season, so I'm going to defend that when I see people criticising the character based solely on what comes across as a misunderstanding of his first scene.Wait, but why do you take this so seriously? It’s just Star Trek.
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