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Spoilers Star Trek: Lower Decks 5x01 – “Dos Cerritos”

Rate the episode...

  • 10 - Excellent!

    Votes: 7 11.1%
  • 9

    Votes: 14 22.2%
  • 8

    Votes: 26 41.3%
  • 7

    Votes: 12 19.0%
  • 6

    Votes: 2 3.2%
  • 5

    Votes: 1 1.6%
  • 4

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • 3

    Votes: 1 1.6%
  • 2

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • 1 - Terrible.

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    63
Sisko's or Picard's Bajoran artefact?

AHc0Xu8.png


Palor Toff (?) has a WoK phaser
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The intro battle is joined by... Apollo!
GMDJ25P.png


...and V'Ger :eek:
TiAgJSH.png
And the Tholians with their WebSpinners!

I kinda like the darker, alternate reality uniform colors better. They seem more "correct."
Like SD TV color vs HDR TV Colors?

I love how the ancient Orion Ship some-what resembles the Orion Ship that the TOS Enterprise encountered.
 
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Hi all,

I have two kids, 8 and 12, and they've both seen every episode of Lower Decks bar about one per season, usually because I was advised right here in the TrekBBS that there might be some in appropriate content- either too sexually explicit [2.7-8, 3.1] or too violent [1.6] or too scary [3.3].

Could the kind folk of the BBS please give me a heads up if there's anything in 5.1 that would not be appropriate for an 8YO.

Thanks!
 
A decent opener to the final season which doesn't particularly break any particularly new ground. Consider me slightly underwhelmed.

The A-plot here, focusing on Cerritos meeting its alternate TL crew, feels like a tired Trek trope, though thinking on it, we've never seen it done before - probably due to the historic production costs of compositing doubles of everyone. We've seen plenty of one-off doubles, like Tom Riker, Intendant Kira, etc. share the screen with their "normal" versions, but never this many at once. I like the touch that the universe is just a little bit off. The bit where Captain Becky Freeman recognizes Mariner's story suggests the POD happened within the run of Lower Decks itself, as does Billups actually being a king here. Also liked the little touch that the episode made us think that Carol had died, only for us to find out at the last minute that she was just reassigned to a scut job at Starbase 80.

The emotional core of this episode though - seeing the toll that command had done on the "alternate" Beckett, who had become a tyrant - just didn't work for me. On an emotional level, it was understandable, but the alternate Starfleet gave every appearance of being pretty much identical, and a captain could not get away creating a ship of "mostly brigs" - let alone whipping her crew. While I know it wouldn't fall in with the MO of this show as a supposed comedy, the impact here would have been better if it was more understated. I'm also a bit frustrated because despite the attempt to tie it in with our Mariner's growing responsibility - that she'll learn to be easier on the new ensigns - we're told this, not shown it.

The B plot with Tendi was much better, I think. She gets less screen time, but there's a complete emotional arc. She starts the episode a capable pirate captain who is conflicted with her crew, since she doesn't want to kill. She and the crew resolve their differences, and she finds a way to use her Starfleet mentality to defeat the blue Orions. Way to go on the show's part having TAS-style Orions here, BTW. I also like that her actions actually had wider consequences - the episode didn't end tied up with a neat bow.

On the whole, this was fine. Lower Decks has never opened on a particularly strong episode. But I really was hoping for something a bit less rote with the A plot.
 
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Saw this pointed out in TrekCore’s review

While this appears to be the first mention in canon of a Great Plague on Orion, in “What Are Little Girls Made Of?” Doctor Roger Korby supposedly translated medical records from ancient Orion ruins that significantly advanced Federation immunization techniques.
The old Orion ship was a longer version of the design seen in SNW S2.
 
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Otherford :lol:

That was fun, as others have said Lower Decks' season openers are rarely the highlights of the season but this was very enjoyable, even if I guessed what Becky Freeman was going to do before she did it, and I thought Boimler stealing his alternate's PADD was going to lead somewhere darker than it did.

T'Lyn's joke was funny but Ransome insulting/complimenting himself at the same time was hilarious. "You sexy bastard!"

I'm surprised the T'anas didn't try to organise a foursome...

Tendi was great, as always. Hopefully she's back on the Cerritos soon.
 
That was a solid enough episode, but not terribly memorable. I kinda wish they did more with the alternate doubles, but I enjoyed it well enough.
 
The emotional core of this episode though - seeing the toll that command had done on the "alternate" Beckett, who had become a tyrant - just didn't work for me. On an emotional level, it was understandable, but the alternate Starfleet gave every appearance of being pretty much identical, and a captain could not get away creating a ship of "mostly brigs" - let alone whipping her crew. While I know it wouldn't fall in with the MO of this show as a supposed comedy, the impact here would have been better if it was more understated. I'm also a bit frustrated because despite the attempt to tie it in with our Mariner's growing responsibility - that she'll learn to be easier on the new ensigns - we're told this, not shown it.

I have mixed feelings on this -- on the one hand, I enjoyed when Captain Becky revealed her sadistic side because at least it was something; on the other, it doesn't really track with Mariner's personality. Logistics aside, I don't and can't see her as somebody who would beat her subordinates.

But the deeper problem of the story for me was that, until the riding crop showed up, it was utterly dramatically inert. Oh, will the two science ships filled with science nerds who need to do a science thing succeed? Until the riding crop showed up, there were zero emotional stakes. And even then, yeah, it's a thin thread to hang the whole A-plot on.

I can tell I'm going to be really picky with this season since it's the last. Two episodes down, eight to go. There's no shrugging off a stinker by thinking, well, there's always more.
 
I have mixed feelings on this -- on the one hand, I enjoyed when Captain Becky revealed her sadistic side because at least it was something; on the other, it doesn't really track with Mariner's personality. Logistics aside, I don't and can't see her as somebody who would beat her subordinates.

But the deeper problem of the story for me was that, until the riding crop showed up, it was utterly dramatically inert. Oh, will the two science ships filled with science nerds who need to do a science thing succeed? Until the riding crop showed up, there were zero emotional stakes. And even then, yeah, it's a thin thread to hang the whole A-plot on.

I can tell I'm going to be really picky with this season since it's the last. Two episodes down, eight to go. There's no shrugging off a stinker by thinking, well, there's always more.

I feel like it would have been a better choice if the alternate Cerritos was quite different. I don't know about MU evil, but there was some sort of inherent conflict, clearly visible from the start, but they had to work together.

The episode did have most of the characters (other than the Boimlers and the Rutherfords) not getting along with their alters, though it seemed for no good reason at all. Are we supposed to believe someone just wants to get in a fistfight with their clone?
 
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