Anyone notice the technobabble in this episode. It seems the writers are really dialing up the technobabble lately. The bubbles that Discovery used to ride through the galactic barrier was pure technobabble. TNG or VOY would have been proud.
This season is pushing back towards TNG/VOY style at least with the anamoly and mystery species.Anyone notice the technobabble in this episode. It seems the writers are really dialing up the technobabble lately. The bubbles that Discovery used to ride through the galactic barrier was pure technobabble. TNG or VOY would have been proud.
Oh my god, did I burst out laughing at the huge music crescendo at the end of that. At the beginning, I thought "it's funny they think we even need this scene, we won't notice if Bryce takes the rest of the season off." But then when the music hit -- we are expected to find this a moving scene! I couldn't believe it! They have written NOTHING over 4 years to earn ANY emotion for this character! Nothing! Some of the other bridge folks have gotten some moments to give them dimension. Bryce never has.
And they think they've earned an emotional goodbye scene for this character? Incredible.
Also, if Gray does not come back, I am truly going to lose my mind. If he's been written out, that was a lot of wasted screentime. They have gotten us interested and invested in that character. Stick with him.
Fluidic space too, though I suppose that's not really what they're talking about here.And technically you can absolutely say that Voyager was outside the galaxy (has none had yet formed when Q sent it back to the moment of the Big Bang.
Opening a can of worms here, I guess, but you could make an argument that it's TNG onward that made the mistake They traveled similar distances in "Where No Man Has Gone Before", "By Any Other Name"*, and "The Magicks of Megas-Tu", and they made trips back to Earth between each of these. Between those and Star Trek V it seems that Kirk and the Enterprises have travelled roughly the diameter of the galaxy twice from those trips alone. Somewhere along the line we pinned down warp speeds in such a way that Voyager would've taken 200 years to make those same trips. I'm sure there have been plenty of attempts to rationalize it, but one could still argue that pinning down the warp speeds in a way that raised the questions was the real mistake.And if they actually reached that point in Final Frontier that would be Trek's single largest error on how fast those starships can travel (that's using what people believed about the structure of the galaxy at the time episodes or films aired).
To each their own, but I'm not a big believer in the attitude that anything that isn't driving the season arc forward is a waste of time. Even a relatively serialized show like Deep Space Nine thrived on "digressions" from the main arcs, and it was much richer for it. Even though it wasn't amazing, I was glad to see some time taken to explore the character.I enjoy a good character study as well as anyone but that was a LOT of time on a minor player. Tarka friend better be in charge of the 10c or this is quite unneeded.
The detail that angered me the most was that the original explanation a few eps back immediately suggested that Tarka's relationship with his "friend" was more than friendship, but ultimately left it vague -- and this episode plays it just as coy! I still have no idea what that relationship is or how it's understood by either participant, which makes this whole story feel like completely wasted time.
Now you're just looking for troubleThe next 3 weeks will have DIS and PIC on at the same time
If they even release them at the same minute, I'll watch PIC first.
Don’t you want to leave the best to last?
That would be a surprise.Earth will get destroyed, mark my words.
Earth will get destroyed, mark my words.
I interpreted the scene in a different way. It seemed to me pretty transparently meant as a sop to the actor who is leaving the show. We as viewers aren't particularly supposed to care, but Saru's lines about seeing him off to his new endeavor directly reference that the actor got another job and couldn't stay part of the cast.
Which is very self indulgent/stupid of them, but eh, casts develop strong emotional bonds, since they spend more time together between shots/in alternate takes than we ever see. And Michelle Paradise is both the head writer and the showrunner, which probably means she's around the cast pretty often. So she gave Bryce this little fond farewell instead of (or maybe in addition to) giving the actor a cake.
Can't it just be that they're friends who share a tight bond from close quarters and adversity? Feel like we spent a pretty good amount of time exploring that. Definitely reflects some valued friendships I've had over the years.
That is not the way.Ok, how many setup/filler episodes are they going to have? Just DO SOMETHING already! Why can't a room full of professional screenwriters come up with a story that actually takes 10-11 episodes to tell instead of just taking a story that TOS used to do in an hour and stretching it out an ungodly long time?
No! Not...feelings...!?
"Above all things a god must have compassion! MITCHELL!"
One issue I had with the Tarka/Oros story is from what Oros said about the alternate universe, it basically just sounded like his race's version of heaven. He offered no proof whatsoever that it actually existed. I was surprised that Tarka as a scientist could be so credulous, but imprisonment does weird things to a mind.
I really hope Oros doesn't end up to be behind the DMA with glowy silver eyes. It would basically result in Season 4 being a retread of Season 3, where a huge galactic threat was actually caused by a manchild with godlike powers who felt a feeling.
Some people here must have been in attention-span hell when seasons were 26 episodes long and the Dominion War storyline took five seasons to tell.
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