"I LIKE THIS EPISODE. It's exciting!"
And he's really Scottish!Who is the actor they got to play this Scotty. He has the mannerisms.
In 2081, an actual East African will play Uhura, a Somalian will play La Forge and an actual French person will play Picard.After 58 years we finally have an actual Scotsman playing Scotty.
The only complaint (other than that this season could have used more Pike) is that, between streaming production schedules and now the double-strike, it is probably going to be a very long time before we find out how it all resolves. But, then, Atlanta once took off four years between seasons. Hopefully, that’s where the resemblance — which, admittedly, maybe only I can see — comes to its end.
Like probably a lot of people, I’m rewatching “Arena” again, and at first it looks like a clear continuity break (though I wouldn’t care much; it’s TV, they’re allowed). But! Two saving factors quickly become apparent:
1. When Kirk initially chases the alien ship, he has no idea at first that it’s the Gorn. It heads for an unfamiliar area (so we can retroactively assume that the Gorn have quietly expanded to new areas), and is only identified as Gorn when the Metrons refer to it as such.
2. In the planet, Kirk’s faced with the Gorn captain, which he describes in the log voiceover as “a creature the Metrons called a Gorn”. That would traditionally be taken as his never having heard of the Gorn before — but in context, he says it just after first seeing the classic humanoid rubber-skin Gorn for the first time. Which looks completely different from the Gorn Starfleet has encountered before! Hence, “a creature the Metrons call a Gorn”. It’s not that Gorn are unfamiliar, it’s that the Gorn have apparently changed, and that’s why we didn’t realize it was them at first.
So if SNW happens to follow up with a story in which the Gorn mutate or encompass more than one species or something, all will fit — probably even if they don’t.
-1 for this being a cliffhanger. Solid 9. Excellent VFX in this. Loved the fakeout of the survivors being beamed up, only to have the dreadful discovery that the Gorn beamed them up.
It's what makes them alien to us. The Gorn likely have no problems balancing their more primal aspects with advanced space technology. They can build starships and easily go on hunting living prey.When they were beamed up I was wondering how the Enterprise was able to beam up such a large cluster of people at once. Although it really does make you wonder how the Gorn technology is so good with such a primitive need for hunting prey and in-fighting.
Earth spins on its axis at 1000 miles an hour, Earth revolves around the sun at 67,000 miles per hour, and our solar system rotates around the galactic core at 515,000 miles per hour...
Pernasus Beta seems to hang dead in Space, not revolving on its axis, or orbiting the sun, or revolving around the galactic core because there's a demarcation line in space that the planet is not hurtling away from or towards at 67,000 mph.
Seriously?
I'm OK with the colony looking like an archaic midwest town, just as a shout-out to the way TOS used Hollywood backlots.
And given the dates and the established histories, it would be weird if Pelia didn't know Scotty.
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