• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Spoilers Star Trek: Discovery 4x06 - "Stormy Weather"

Rate the episode...


  • Total voters
    125
Assuming the creators are willing to go down the TOS route with a character becoming so powerful and doing something so consequential.
 
Yes, nostalgia franchise. I too remember "Where Silence Has Lease"

I was fully expecting for them to find the USS Yamato.

Decent episode, nothing special. Flames and fire in an airless setting, while understandable from a dramatic perspective (after all, sound in space and spaceships banking to turn are Trek staples) it goes on the BAD SCIENCE pile. Zora is Moira from Diane Duane's old Trek novels.
 
The ships hull was melting from exposure to the anomaly.
Since most construction materials contain some oxygen molecules, sparks flying isn't that unusual.

At least They didn't crank up the flamethrowers. :techman:
 
Yeah, it is odd. TNG, DS9 and VOY never once mentioned it nor even ENT, though that might be forgiven since humans had yet to reach that far towards the Galactic Barrier(save for the crew of the S.S. Valiant sometime after 2065) so may never have seen it.
Personally as a kid I hated it because I thought it was a human/alien built barrier which sounded stupid but now its back and I realize it might be gas or something Im ok with it
 
Discovery detractors: "Discovery is too emotional."
Discovery writers: "You know what, f*** you. Just for that, now the computer has to be talked through its emotional hangups too."

Good episode, one step closer to my prediction that Zora will be given its own physically attractive robot body.

It was a power move by the writers, no doubt. I respect it.
 
Is Grey a android? In which case he should have been left behind to run the ship.

I mean, if his body is designed to function as much like an organic body as possible, then his being a synth might not actually make him any better able to survive those extreme conditions than an organic.

Just felt like another filler,

I don't like that term. It implies that standalone stories aren't important or legitimate as stories, that the only stories that "count" are heavily arc-based stories.

This isn't a documentary. Star Trek is never going to be "just the facts ma'am" Dragnet.

Yeah, but some folks don't want to experience a work of art. They want to view a filmed Wikipedia article.

Agree with most of this. In particular, they bring in Book to be the quirky extra character

"Quirky?" "Extra?" He's a principle character.

but they haven’t even fleshed out the bridge crew yet. Do that first and you don’t need quirky extra characters.

Why would they do that? The bridge crew aren't principle characters. The show is not about them.

It would've made more sense and also built on the relationship the episode had just established between Gray and Zora. Gray could then perhaps become the Zora 'whisperer', something to do on the vessel.

I think that would have been a legit decision to make, but it seems to me that the writers are trying to set up a relationship between Michael and Zora and that final scene with them on the bridge is going to be foundational to that.

I think about ENT now and how underutilized Mayweather was, but in comparison to some of the DISCO ensemble, he would be the lead character. And I could say the same for Hoshi and perhaps even for Reed. If I really thought about it, I might be able to make the case for Porthos too.

The bridge crew on DIS aren't really comparable to Mayweather, Reed, or Hoshi. All three of those characters were principle characters on ENT -- the show was about them. The bridge crew on DIS are recurring supporting characters, not principle cast.

Discovery is way over the top with emotions.

It's really not. The DIS cast is about as emotional as most people in real life are, and I've met plenty of people in real life who are much more emotional than the DIS characters.

Starfleet is a MILITARY organisation, but the crew behaves like they're constantly at a shrink or something. It's so unprofessional. It's all so touchy, feely... and it's starting to annoy me.

I find DIS's depiction of human emotion much more realistic than the shallow cardboard cutouts called "main characters" on much of TNG and VOY.

I don't care about characters like Book, Adira or Grey... And this episode, nothing really happened storywise.

Plenty happened storywise. But it happened to characters you don't like, so what happened didn't move you. Which is fair, but stuff did happen.

Yeah, it is odd. TNG, DS9 and VOY never once mentioned it nor even ENT, though that might be forgiven since humans had yet to reach that far towards the Galactic Barrier(save for the crew of the S.S. Valiant sometime after 2065) so may never have seen it.

I mean, I don't think we've ever seen anyone intentionally try to leave the Milky Way Galaxy in Star Trek since TOS "By Any Other Name," have we? The only 24th Century time we saw someone leave the galaxy that I can remember is TNG "Where No One Has Gone Before," and that was using non-standard propulsion and unintentional, IIRC.
 
Flames and fire in an airless setting, while understandable from a dramatic perspective (after all, sound in space and spaceships banking to turn are Trek staples) it goes on the BAD SCIENCE pile. Zora is Moira from Diane Duane's old Trek novels.
Did I miss them saying they vented all compartments? All I remember hearing is Zora asking if she should turn off Life Support, now, which Michael says yes. But turning off life support wouldn't mean you vent the ship. Just means you stop running, vents, scrubbers, heat or cooling, ect. With all but one crew member in the buffer, the oxygen in the air would last quite a bit longer (though any compartment that is vented would almost immediately loose it, and they specifically mention two hull breaches on the lower decks of Discovery, and later she mentions the ship is losing large portions of the hull). But without anything else using the oxygen on the bridge, would the oxygen last long enough for for sparks and the fire that is burning for 1 minute and 45 seconds?
 
I mean, if his body is designed to function as much like an organic body as possible, then his being a synth might not actually make him any better able to survive those extreme conditions than an organic.

‪‪I think you’re right, and I believe that Gray (and Picard) is what was referred to in season 1 of Picard as “an organic Synth,” like Soji and Dahj Asha, and his body is constructed of synthesized organic materials, basically functioning as an organic being.
 
Well, let's see: outside of the galaxy. We have the Kelvans, builders of the Doomsday Machine, builders of those androids from I, Mudd, Catspaw aliens...the novels have O from the Q Continuum books and what's-her-name from the Shatnerverse books...I saw a fan series (Iliad? Odyssey?) with another invading species from the Andromeda galaxy. Am I missing any other previously seen potential suspects?

They just named dropped enterprise. Which means there is a enterprise in the 32nd century.

So there's an Enterprise in this time period. Until contradicted by onscreen evidence I'm calling it the Enterprise-Z. :)

Except he didn't say which Enterprise, or which Voyager. I was wondering if it was meant as a callback to episodes of Voyager and either TNG or TOS.

How are there fires and sparks if there is no life support? I mean I know there would be some oxygen left but that that would be used up rather quickly.

I mean, it's a big bridge with a not likely airtight turbolift door or two (and we've seen where those doors can lead these days...).

Thanks to you both.

Daaaaarrn, we need a new Enterprise! Two actually, one pre-Burn and one post-Burn. I want Eaglemoss models and see them in STO. *needy mumbling*

What letter would they be on now?

I had a huge smile on my face with the reference. Also makes me wonder if one of the characters is going to get Gary Mitchell-ed.

I'd like to say that the shields have certainly improved by now, but given what we've seen of 32nd century tech...

Cortez died because he stayed at his post.

While the other trainees ran?

If there is Zora and the computer just get Zora out of there.

You say that like it's a thing they know how to do...

That show would be great.

Also, would not be real Star Trek (trademark pending).

It would not only be real Star Trek, but real good Star Trek.

Nah. Tech fails because in real life tech fails. Technology isn't the end all be all of society. Shit happens Tires blow out. Guns jam. The power grid goes down. Airplanes crash. Being IN THE FUTURE!!!!!! isn't going to change that.

"Fuck! Even in the future nothing works!"

In all seriousness, if tech is as crap in 1,100 years as it is now, it may be time to dust off the old "they're turning Trek into a dystopia" argument...

Stories tend to be driven by conflict, loss, love and things people have found relatable since we began telling stories. That will never change.

Good stories are never about perfect 100% "competent" people with unfailing tech that always gets them out of any situation .

Competent =/= perfect.

6. They blew Cortez out. Fantastic.

????
 
Adding to the list of species outside the galaxy, we have the species which constructed the probe which encountered the USS Greyhound. This event is mentioned on a star chart first seen in "The Naked Now".

Though it is not seen in Berman Trek, there is written canonical information about extragalactic space being explored by Milky Way ships. From "Aquiel", there is mention of a CGN Carolique being on a deep space exploration mission in that region.

I just realized the only other species known to have an extragalactic origin are the flying parasites from "Operation -- Annihilate!". They are assumed from within the canon to be from the Large Magellanic Cloud.
 
Last edited:
Did I miss them saying they vented all compartments? All I remember hearing is Zora asking if she should turn off Life Support, now, which Michael says yes. But turning off life support wouldn't mean you vent the ship. Just means you stop running, vents, scrubbers, heat or cooling, ect. With all but one crew member in the buffer, the oxygen in the air would last quite a bit longer (though any compartment that is vented would almost immediately loose it, and they specifically mention two hull breaches on the lower decks of Discovery, and later she mentions the ship is losing large portions of the hull). But without anything else using the oxygen on the bridge, would the oxygen last long enough for for sparks and the fire that is burning for 1 minute and 45 seconds?
Fair point, nothing was vented so yeah the air should linger for the fires etc.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top