Pelia scaring the shit outta Scotty to force him into correctly teching the tech was so fucking good.Another highlight for me was Martin Quinn's portrayal of a younger, less confident Scotty. I imagine will see him blossom into The Miracle Worker as the series continues, especially under Pelia's guidance.
Pike started reciting the Lord’s Prayer at the end.
Is this the first time his religiousness has come up since discovery season 2?
I don’t remember if it came up at all in S1 and 2
I remember commenting about the Gorn ships reminding me of the Wraith when the first trailer came out, and I was still seeing that the whole way through!My main criticism of the actual episode:
A SHITOAD of technobabble. Like, way more even than back in VOY times.
The action was nice, the production value fantastic, the dramatic moments serviceable.
However - all the dramatic moments really helped on some major technobabble events, not natural plot points. There just wasn't much meat to the story, at all. That's why everything felt a little empty.
So... for me very mediocre Star Trek rek. But hell... real Star Trek. Which even mediocre makes me quite happy.
(Side-note: Yes, "Alien", blabla - what this episode REALLY reminded me was the "Wraith" from Stargate: Atlantis!)
You do see him pull up her vitals on his arm rest at one point.1. Pike in "captain mode" on the bridge with Una and the rando extras, and talking with Robert April. I don't think this stuff was bad by any means, and it showcased Pike's command style well (collaborative, but able to make tough decisions). That said, separating him from Batel when she was on death's door in in sick bay until the very end of the episode blunted some of the potential drama here. You did get little hints of Pike's nerves in Mount's performance, but his mask of good Starfleet captain is almost perfect until the end, when he gets a chance to break down when they're out of danger. I dunno, I'd have liked a bit more explicitness here - like a scene where Una has to talk him down a bit, or a quiet moment when he visits sick bay. I feel like it would have made his arc here more compelling.
The Gorn are always monsters.
Sorry, but Arena didn't make them less monstrous. The crew assumes they are in the wrong with no due diligence. Even the alien arbiters note that Kirk's mercy would not have been reciprocated.
I will disagree that it felt like a person. It felt very much like a monster. I know the goal is to build towards a more an understanding of aliens being in the right, something Trek sometimes lapses in.I'm not using "monster" in the sense of just being scary, but in the sense of not being a character.
The Gorn in Arena was a person. Not a nice person, but a person. That was part of the point of the whole episode - that from the perspective of the Gorn, they were in the right.
Aside from the use of starships and beam weapons and such, there's basically nothing in what SNW has shown us regarding the Gorn which make them seem like people. In this episode, they are shown as being more like an insect swarm, or a force of nature, without a hint of rational thought.
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