Which is not what I described at all so this example is meaningless.
But actually it's quite close. I can mention the death scene of Ghemor here in one of the DS9 episodes which is not one of my favorites. We can also count Sarek's death in this cathegory too.
Yeah. I give up. Destruction simply doesn't exist to me the way it's being described.
I guess that we have to agree on the fact that we have different opinions in this case.
True. But I see the necessity of eliminating a character here and there. A tapestry is all the more compelling for its dark spots. And I remember one movie that just got eyerolling because they had all these characters in a massive firefight and none of them died.
And it's still the most efficient way to terminate a love triangle.
I have to agree here, especially when it comes to create dramatic scenarios. But I don't like when great characters are killed off for no reason at all.
As for the firefight scene you describe, it's simply bad storytelling and bad filming. If I hade written and made it, I would have reduced the "heroes" to just one or two characters who had taken out their opponents very quick.
In fact, I really hate long action scenes with too much explosions and too much meaningless action. The last ten minutes of the otherwise excellent movie
Con Air with that fire engine running into one house or car after another totally ruined the movie for me. I remember saying to my then girlfriend when we watched it:
"Oh, there goes another house and there goes another house too, will this never end, please wake me up when the movie is over!"
Dukat... uchhh. Not sure which is worse, the creepiness or the megalomania.
Dukat is actually my favorite villain in Star Trek! I liked both his creepiness and his megalomania.
Not to mention that for a while I wasn't sure if he would be a bad guy or becoming a good guy. That made him interesting.
The same actually for Garak. I wasn't sure if he would become a bad guy or a good guy in the end. Fortunately he became a good guy!
It happened in the novel-verse as well. That was of course completely non-canon, but still.
I consider the books made after the series as "canon" as well. To be honest, I actually consider the season 1, 2 and 3 Voyager books as "canon" too since it was so easy to include them in the Voyager timeline I constructed.
Fully agreed about the first two. As for the third, I didn't read it. But given that the books aren't canon, I wouldn't worry too much.
Yes, but since there will be no more episodes of DS9, I consider the books made after the series as "canon" as well. To be honest, I actually consider the season 1, 2 and 3 Voyager books as "canon" too since it was so easy to include them in the Voyager timeline I constructed.
The problem with the Star Trek boks is that no one seem to want to change possible stupid things. If a character is killed off in a book, no author dare to bring that character back in another.
Kes is a good example here. Even in the two booke where the authors really tried to restore the character from the damage made in thehat season six episode, they still were very afraid to deal with the mumbo-jumbo from The Gift and later events. No one dared to bring her back to what she was before it and give her a human lifespan or so.
Some people like things like that. Different strokes.
Yes, I can understand that. But I don't like it and definitely not in Star Trek.
OK, I might be a bit sensitive here but my childhood was interfered with a lots of deaths of relatives and friends to my family, during a ten year-period it was almost one funeral every year. Fortunately none of my family died, that came some years later but a lot of relatives and friends to my family.
I just got enough of that in the Gray Universe, therefore don't like when it interfere too much with tings which I watch to get away from the Gray Universe from time to time.
Again, agree to disagree. Sometimes, you need a death to have an emotional impact, and you can't do that with characters who are basically cardboard cutouts.
That's true. I have killed off a lot of characters myself in some stories. But they have more and less been created to be killed off.
It's worse when it comes to main characters who I like.
As for cardboard cutout characters, I'll rathe try to make them useful in a way. Otherwise I put them on a train to some other town or in a space ship to another planet or starbase.
I'll add post-Insurrection Riker/Troi to that.
I agree. I actually forgot to mention them in my previous post. That relationship was expected and is good.
Sounds like you better skip PRO. The second season anyway.
Why?
Maybe you can give me a spoiler:
Oh, Harry gets promoted in books and video games... just not in any medium that's considered canon.
As I wrote before, I do consider books made after the end of the series as "canon", even some books made during some series too.
But I agree on your statement when it comes to series and movies and I still can't understand why it is so hard to give popor Harry a promotion.
Ha ha ha! Brutal! Your scenario is even nastier than mine was... I knew there was something I liked about you.
I do have a mean streak sometimes. If someone hurts me and I can't win, then I still try to pay back in some way.
My head canon for how Mullibok took his revenge didn't involve nuking moons, it was quieter... but darker than a stein of Russian Imperial Stout.
Maybe you could enlighten me with another spoiler?
