I’m always late to the party. I thought it was the strongest episode since the start of the season, even though most of it was shot so dark it was a struggle to even see what was happening. Picard’s flashbacks were handled must more powerfully and effectively here (rendering the trip into his head by Tallinn redundant and largely unnecessary).
There’s a lot to unpack, but I have to say I have mixed feelings about what it does with the Borg. First of all, the proto-Borg weren’t terribly exciting, and we didn’t really get to see many of them up close. I expected something a little scarier somehow. While the Jurati/Borg Queen conflict was well done, I’m not sure I entirely bought it. Of all the people that have ever been assimilated (in this case by the Queen, no less, who presumably is far more powerful than the average drone), why is Jurati the only one who successfully manages to challenge and transform the Borg’s entire reason for being? It’s not like Agnes even seemed to have a particularly strong personality—in the first season she was shown as intelligent, yes, but more than a little neurotic and weak minded (and fairly easily pushed to commit murder).
The idea that the Borg always lose in all universes just doesn’t work for me. Sure, we’ve seen them lose a lot in Star Trek (and especially Voyager) but that’s simply because of the conventions of television and because the heroes always have to win (not helped by the fact Voyager overused the Borg terribly). The Borg were arguably the most terrifying villain Trek ever created because they were this unstoppable, unreasonable force of nature. That’s what made them scary—they couldn’t be reasoned with.
This episode retcons them as simply being lonely and looking for love. Alison Pill sells the hell out of it, but I still can’t believe on the basis of one little speech, the Borg have now agreed to become the good Samaritans of the universe and ask politely before they assimilate. It’s a very Star Trekky take, I know. I even kind of…kind of…like the audacity of it, but ultimately I am not convinced. I’ll see how it’s addressed in the finale, but I don’t buy it right now. To me, it would be kind of like if the writers expected us to believe the Klingons would trade their batleths for flowers and follow in the footsteps of Tongo Rad’s Space Hippies, doing away with violence in order to perform acts of kindness across the galaxy.