Not whatsoever. Development builds upon where the writer started, from Benny Russell's experiences, and move forward.This assumes a static character.
This is not my experience when talking with authors.
Not whatsoever. Development builds upon where the writer started, from Benny Russell's experiences, and move forward.This assumes a static character.
This is not my experience when talking with authors.
And we have zero information as to when he wrote this story.Not whatsoever. Development builds upon where the writer started, from Benny Russell's experiences, and move forward.
Yes. It's his normal accent.Does this man talks like this in real life as well?
Imagine if a stranger showed up at your door, accidently endangers you somehow, and then you're like, well, he seems nice and the daughter likes him because he performed a magic trick! Here's our daughter. Keep her!
That's basically what M'Benga did.
No, the Entity didn't explicitly offer that option to M'Benga, but he also never asked or brought it up in any form himself whatsoever, either.
Don't play coy. Either explain your meaning or don't.If wishes were horses. Watch it.
A Boltzmann brain would likely not be able to have parts of it snipped out without affecting the whole. It's not just a nebula, but a living brain. I doubt many would be open to the idea of having a partial lobotomy, even if it were to help someone else. Plus, the solution, as presented, is so much more elegant: she lives forever. She will never know death, not in the way that mortal beings learn of death.And M'Benga never asked about the possibility of carrying elements of Debra (the nebula) with them, assuming that it was possible, so that Rukiya will be healed in the normal world and she won't have to leave her friend entirely behind. The idea that he can only choose to either restore the ship to normal or to let Rukiya be healthy is fairly silly, as presented. YMMV, of course.
I have rather mixed feelings overall about the episode, because I feel like the concept was good but it's thrown together rather clumsily. There are a lot of plot elements that don't really work for me, especially parts of the ending, because there should have been more build up to them. I wish the episode had a bit more polish and different execution.
IDK- The entity was pretty clear that once they leave the Nebula, Rukiya's illness would return and the only way to keep that from happening was stay in the Nebula - or have Rukiya join with the Brain.And M'Benga never asked about the possibility of carrying elements of Debra (the nebula) with them, assuming that it was possible, so that Rukiya will be healed in the normal world and she won't have to leave her friend entirely behind. The idea that he can only choose to either restore the ship to normal or to let Rukiya be healthy is fairly silly, as presented. YMMV, of course.
I have rather mixed feelings overall about the episode, because I feel like the concept was good but it's thrown together rather clumsily. There are a lot of plot elements that don't really work for me, especially parts of the ending, because there should have been more build up to them. I wish the episode had a bit more polish and different execution.
My thoughts almost exactly!This one really fell flat for me. I had fun with the first 3/4ths, but the resolution felt way too pat and M'Benga way too passive. And the episode as a whole just wasn't up to carrying the emotional weight the writers were aiming for - it felt like a loose end from a prior season someone was trying to wrap up, which is a weird notion for a ten-episode first season. Give it a 5 for good intentions and muddled execution.
I think Benny was just either a sci-fi writer Ben had read before that the Pah'Wraiths used for their story or one that they brought to his attention (but he never really wrote a DS9 story)....As Benny Russell was the writer for the storybook, does that mean "Far Beyond the Stars" was not an illusion but an actual series of events in the Star Trek universe?...
Exactly. Agree on all these points!...I think showing a flashback of the book each time a character was introduced was really unnecessary. I was like, "We get it already!" It felt like the stuff that was just the plot from the book wasn't really that interesting other than to see the actors having fun / enjoying the silliness. I didn't really feel any stakes, unlike in "Our Man Bashir", but it felt like the plot was just going through the motions. Not saying it was horrible, but it didn't always engage me as a viewer. I also didn't really find a lot of it funny - some small chuckles here and there, but not as many as I expected. Still, I appreciate the effort and love the different tones SNW has had.
At the end, I was surprised M'Benga was quick to let his daughter join with the entity. What if it was a Durmamu from Dr. Strange situation and his daughter would have been tormented for eternity...I mean he really knew nothing about the entity and is taking its word for it despite it refusing to let the ship go. As it is, she is going to be an entity for as long as the universe exists..is a human mind meant for that?
I am hoping Ben's interaction with the Pah'Wraiths revitalized the memory of a long ago, and likely underappreciated, sci-fi writer in the Trek Universe.Benny got published! Screw you, Pah-wraiths!
It would have been neat that instead of having no tie into the ship's mission, that the Enterprise probing the nebula should have been the "nucleating event" that caused the consciousness in the nebula to form.M'Benga's daughter is now an energy being living in a nebula that had spontaneously formed itself into a mind.
I can't say that QPid is good, but this episode was certainly way, way better than Fair Haven. And way better than most of DIS.What a worthless pile of shit. QPid is great because the whole crew knows they're being messed with by Q, this was just fucking Fair Haven but with LARPing instead of Irish stereotypes. This is now easily the worst episode of SNW, beating out the stupid child sacrifice episode and the Freaky Friday episode. I'd almost rather watch 50 minutes of Michael Burnham & friends softly discussing their feelings while crying over on DSC then rewatch this episode.
1/10, I can't believe we had a shitty holodeck episode on a show that (as of yet) doesn't even have a damn holodeck.
Edit: I just read about the DS9 reference, so I'll take this opportunity to say fuck DS9's Far Beyond the Stars, it was the second worst DS9 episode after Profit and Lace. Also, how the hell can a figment of Sisko's imagination write a book![]()
Agree with all this, especially about letting the kid decide and M'Benga's anguish. M'Benga's choice was the only moment I felt anything more than boredom while watching last night.Well, a definite swing and a miss here.
In spite of M'Benga and Hemmer.
I was bored for 90% of the show. Too hammy. Too silly. Too stupid.
Couldn't buy the resolution either. And letting a ten-year-old decide? Evidently the writers don't have children.
M'Benga's anguish was the only real thing about the spisode...
This would have been a good idea to have covered with this episode. And if they were actually trying to do this in this episode, they failed.The episode’s events are metaphorical code for Rukiya dying, imo
They chose to give a story of coping with death a fairy tale wrapping.
Both Rukiya and Dr M’Benga come to terms with the fact her regular life is over and has been for a while...
Yeah, the story's set up to give M'Benga nothing but hard choices, there.
- Ship stays in nebula - daughter lives, everyone's lives are disrupted;
- Ship somehow leaves daughter in nebula in corporeal form - she lives, but is alone;
- Daughter leaves with ship - she dies;
- Father stays with daughter in nebula, ship leaves;
- Daughter stays in nebula, joined with "Debra" in energy form...
Welcome to the wonderful world of episodic storytelling.The dreaded Voyager reset button strikes again!
I'm not sure that, in terms of stakes or groundedness, Shore Leave is the example you want to go with.Conclusion: This episode was too much TNG's "Masks" and not enough TOS's "Shore Leave"
Welcome to the wonderful world of episodic storytelling.
Nope.So did every one like Anson Mounts performance.
Yeah, I love how TOS has suddenly become the baseline of "groundeness and science" in these discussions. I truly am blown away by the selective reasoning applied with this show, even a show supposedly beloved by several.I'm not sure that, in terms of stakes or groundedness, Shore Leave is the example you want to go with.
A Boltzmann brain would likely not be able to have parts of it snipped out without affecting the whole. It's not just a nebula, but a living brain. I doubt many would be open to the idea of having a partial lobotomy, even if it were to help someone else. Plus, the solution, as presented, is so much more elegant: she lives forever. She will never know death, not in the way that mortal beings learn of death.
IDK- The entity was pretty clear that once they leave the Nebula, Rukiya's illness would return and the only wanty to keep that from happening was stay in the Nebula - or have Rukiya join with the Brain.
Boltzmann brains manifest with a full memory of the universe. A simple understanding of how the cells in Rukiya's body work would present a solution from such vast knowledge. In such a situation, too, imagination and reality would be the same thing. Deborah got the idea from Rukiya, after all, when putting together a fantasy for her to enjoy.You may both be right, but I'll admit one of my issues with this episode is how Debra is able to alter the ship in the manner she (?) does. From my very limited understanding of the basic concept of the Boltzmann brain, I didn't get the impression it would be able to affect its environment in such a way versus being a sentience, but I might be wrong. Plus in a Trek context, it's really at the whim of the writers anyway.
Was there actually any specific reason given why Debra's powers included healing Rukiya, or was it more just a plot device? Because that's sort of how some of the less successful elements in the story felt to me. I didn't really like how the altered crew didn't seem to mind that their "kingdom" had starship parts everywhere but they found technology to be like "magic."
I also found the memory wipe of everyone but M'Benga at the end to be kind of odd, since there's no context to support it. As Ometiklan says, there's a number of ways the story could have connected with the characters better.
Yesterday was crazy in RL, so I admit my memory of dialogue is less good than normal. I'll try not to overthink things.![]()
It was dumb.Really? Why? I thought mount was hilarious.
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