we're what 3 years away from that event?I'm calling it now, the Protostar and experiments with it are what is going to destroy the Romulan sun.
we're what 3 years away from that event?I'm calling it now, the Protostar and experiments with it are what is going to destroy the Romulan sun.
They’re not going to do that on a children’s showI'm calling it now, the Protostar and experiments with it are what is going to destroy the Romulan sun.
4-5we're what 3 years away from that event?
I'm really torn on this episode, because I thought it was pretty successful in isolation as an entertaining and fast-paced episode of TV. However, I really, really hate what it means for the remainder of the season arc.
There was a lot to like here, particularly in terms of fanservice. We get to see the Xindi and meet Okana again. We get to have the kids run into various members of Janeway's crew. There's tense action scenes in spades, and the status quo was certainly upset by the end.
But the episode - and the entire plot of the season - now rest on a series of contrivances which largely come down to no one being able to communicate properly. Stretching out a plot via miscommunication is one of the absolute worst writing crutches. Literally everything could have been solved if just one of Dal, Gwyn, or Jankom Pog actually could have said something coherent and understandable to a member of the crew of the Dauntless. But they all turn into a bunch of dum-dums who can't actually say the right thing because of the needs of the plot.
Look, I get it. They want Vice-Admiral Janeway to be the antagonist for the back half of Season 1, and since she's good, and the kids are good, there had to be some scenario that would stop the kids from actually explaining what was going on. But having them to meet face-to-face with six episodes yet to come...and faceplant so badly...is just a letdown. I suppose we're meant to be disappointed like the kids are, but I'm more just left wondering why they're all absolute morons...which isn't something I should feel for the protagonists of a show.
Communication breakdown is a common trope in kid's shows.I suppose we're meant to be disappointed like the kids are, but I'm more just left wondering why they're all absolute morons...which isn't something I should feel for the protagonists of a show.
Communication breakdown is a common trope in kid's shows.
Even five years after the Shinzon Crisis they treat Starfleet ships near the Neutral Zone like they're going to rob the place to sell the cool stuff for drug money. That's consistency for you, though. Romulans and humans and their allies have been enemies for almost the entirety of the previous 230 years of history. Habits are hard to break, especially for xenophobes.
Look, I get it. They want Vice-Admiral Janeway to be the antagonist for the back half of Season 1, and since she's good, and the kids are good, there had to be some scenario that would stop the kids from actually explaining what was going on. But having them to meet face-to-face with six episodes yet to come...and faceplant so badly...is just a letdown. I suppose we're meant to be disappointed like the kids are, but I'm more just left wondering why they're all absolute morons...which isn't something I should feel for the protagonists of a show.
No, it's her mom's diary but a page goes missing when she discovers her mom had the same ability to talk to animals as she does. But a page goes missing right as she reads "the ability to talk to animals can disappear when..."Is the girl's mom a diary?
I wonder if the distrust actually comes originally from the association with the Vulcans, whose obsession with logic can easily be interpreted as the very reason the Romulan people lost their home. Anyone who can ally with a people who treated their own people so harshly as they had to leave their homeworld in order to avoid subjugation. And since humans are also an emotional species (not to mention Andorians and Tellarites) it's like the ultimate fuck you. Then humans actually effected political change on Vulcan, subjugating it to their will (in a way). Given most Romulans we've seen have been military, it's interesting to consider what your average Romulan citizen might think.
Okona had an eyepatch in his appearance in Lower Decks, too. Not sure what you are referring to.That's right. He had both eyes in LD and that episode was set in 2380 or 2381.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.