Actually, Kirk joins their crew.What a coincidence that every crew member stuck on the Farragut would later join Kirk’s crew.
Kirk was assigned the Enterprise and opted to retain experience personnel.What a coincidence that every crew member stuck on the Farragut would later join Kirk’s crew.
Kirk: Dr. McCoy, what a surprise to see you here on the Enterprise to relieve Dr. Piper!What a coincidence that every crew member stuck on the Farragut would later join Kirk’s crew.
Easily, and far and away, the best episode of the season. A showcase of the best Trek has to offer.
The core of this episode is the character journey of Jim Kirk during his first captaincy, and it succeeded here in spades. Kirk starts the episode gloriously flawed - in some ways greener than what we saw of him last season. But he learns hard lessons through the disaster of his acting captaincy. I enjoyed the choice that it was Spock that needed to break him out of his funk - that Kirk's success as a captain in TOS in part relied upon Spock's counsel. Though the decision to have all the TOS characters (Spock, Chapel, Uhura, Scotty) could seem a little contrived, this could also be seen as something of a forging of what's to come - the beginning of a connection which means when Kirk takes over for Pike, he asks for them to stay, or they wish to stay on.
But, like a lot of the big disaster episodes of Star Trek, this is mostly an exercise in collaborative problem solving - in this case times two, as we have both the Farragut and Enterprise crews trying desperately to defeat the scavenger ship. Considering how fragmented all of this was across various subplots, from La'an and Pike in combat to the scavengers, to Pelia's insane plan to manually wire the ship (her having rotary phones for centuries honestly pushed past suspension of disbelief for me) it's surprising that it all hung together. The technobabble didn't really bother me either, perhaps in part because the solutions they were coming to were tangible, rather than just throwing more technobabble at things while staring at a screen.
I'm seeing some mixed feelings about the last-minute reveal that the scavenger ship was crewed by humans, but I loved it. The choice gave depth to an episode that would otherwise be a fairly conventional disaster tale. It's very Trekkian to eschew uncomplicated villains, after all. I like ending on the mystery of how after the cultural drift of centuries, the best and brightest of humanity turned into something unrecognizable and evil. I also like that it gave Kirk a taste of ashes in his mouth, as a simple victory would leave him with only a single lesson learned. Leadership is often hard, and every choice has a consequence.
I don't think the episode was perfect. I think Pelia's phone idea was frankly unneeded narratively. It might have made sense to have included Sam Kirk here, though I'd prefer he stay onboard the Enterprise. But it's as close to perfect as SNW has accomplished to date, and clearly in the top five of the show as a whole.
Certainly an intersting episode though it does make one wonder how they were able to build an interstellar generational ship during the post-atomic horror when it seemed like such a colossal undertaking to make the Phoenix.
Of course the international effort slapped an american flag on it. Although the struggle to find the resources to make the Phoenix could be because so much got scavenged and hoarded for this project.The Phoenix was built by a couple of people in the middle of Montana, the generation ship was an international effort led by the one of the only remaining functioning countries, according to Pelia.
Of course the international effort slapped an american flag on it.
Not the entirity of it evidentlyThat I assume was the "one of the few nations left standing" that Pelia mentioned.
I think some eagle-eyed fan already pointed out that the flag has 50 stars, although TNG: The Royale said that the US flag got 52 stars in 2033. That means that the ship launched before 2033, yet Pelia says it launched in the aftermath of World War 3, which would put the launch in the late 2050s or early 2060s.Of course the international effort slapped an american flag on it. Although the struggle to find the resources to make the Phoenix could be because so much got scavenged and hoarded for this project.
Could be the aftermath in the earlier part of the 21st century, since the Eugenics Wars/World War 3 was in the 90s.I think some eagle-eyed fan already pointed out that the flag has 50 stars, although TNG: The Royale said that the US flag got 52 stars in 2033. That means that the ship launched before 2033, yet Pelia says it launched in the aftermath of World War 3, which would put the launch in the late 2050s or early 2060s.
OH NO! Continuity error! WORST EPISODE EVER! Trek is ruined, I tell you, ruined!!!!!![]()
Given that Khan and his followers had a sleeper ship from the 90s i imagine some places had more resources than others.Certainly an intersting episode though it does make one wonder how they were able to build an interstellar generational ship during the post-atomic horror when it seemed like such a colossal undertaking to make the Phoenix.
I think some eagle-eyed fan already pointed out that the flag has 50 stars, although TNG: The Royale said that the US flag got 52 stars in 2033. That means that the ship launched before 2033, yet Pelia says it launched in the aftermath of World War 3, which would put the launch in the late 2050s or early 2060s.
OH NO! Continuity error! WORST EPISODE EVER! Trek is ruined, I tell you, ruined!!!!!![]()
I didn't use to be a warp ship. That came later. But it explains why the Starfleet ships outclassed it in the warp category even held together by just duct tape.The ship wasn't a warp vessel. Was it a sleeper ship?
This episode takes place after Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow meaning that the 1990s Eugenics Wars isn't a thing, unless they're shifting back to the Space Seed timeline without telling us. I suppose it's POSSIBLE that Khan launched the Eugenics Wars in the early 2030s and Pelia used the term WW3 to describe it (instead of the war of the 2050s mentioned in TNG and other episodes) considering that they've more or less become the same thing in recent Trek dialogue despite being decades apart still.Could be the aftermath in the earlier part of the 21st century, since the Eugenics Wars/World War 3 was in the 90s.
Given that Khan and his followers had a sleeper ship from the 90s i imagine some places had more resources than others.
I do think they should have had Sam Kirk in this episode as well. Makes me wonder why they didn't use him in it.
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