Even 800 years later?
After a rewatch I think I will firmly give the first episode a like and not a love.Wow, it's here!
A friend of mine has a screener, and I watched it yesterday, managing to get through episode 1.
Without spoilers, I will say that it's a very good premiere with several notable Easter eggs I'm sure most fans will like, but I don't think it's for everybody. If you've already made your mind up about this era then Academy won't change it.
It's also a long episode, and it needs all the time to get through the story. From a fantastic opening, and good personal story it is very well rounded, despite being heavier in action than I'd have liked.
I'll give it a solid 8 out of 10 score. I'll withhold rating until tomorrow.
Didn't he save the 1012 humans on the United Starship Enterprise Dee on multiple occasions? Surely just doing that once should earn you something.I'm still wondering if Wesley Crusher's name deserved to be on the wall of GOAT Starfleet Academy alumni. I mean, not only did he accidentally get a fellow cadet killed, but he dropped out of Starfleet Academy to hang out with The Traveler.
Oh please. Starfleet using lethal measures to end a threat is hardly new given General Order 24 is a thing.Am I the only one bothered by the fact that the episode began by stating how the Federation failed Caleb through extra-judicial punishment and then the episode ends with Starfleet executing a ship full of bandits? And we're all supposed to be okay with that? And then they don't even bother looking for Paul Giamatti?
Exactly.Are we really trying to say Ake was wrong to blow away a bunch of pirates who were literally attacking a school?
Or in Insurrection, the Enterprise beams Picard off the exploding Son'a Collector but leaves Ru'afo (who was standing quite literally right in front of him) behind to die in the explosion.Oh please. Starfleet using lethal measures to end a threat is hardly new given General Order 24 is a thing.
Janeway had no issue destroying Kazon raiders and remember that time she decided it was time to take out the garbage and destroy a malon freighter instead of just leaving them stranded with a two year journey home? Or what about the time she helped the Borg kill a species they started a war with?
Sisko is an accessory to murder for crying out loud and used biogenic weapons against the maquis.
I just rewatched the sequence and that doesn't really track with how it’s portrayed. Ake specifically orders: “Blow that ship to hell.” Which Ya promptly does (“With pleasure, Captain”). You are right that we don’t see it fully explode, but the intention of the script seems to be to have Ake order complete destruction instead of just disabling their weapons.Regardless, I think what happened with the pirate ship here was a failure of communication across the scripting and the VFX team. I wouldn't be surprised if the original just specified the bridge ordered them to fire on the ship, and then the VFX team decided to make it as big/cool of an explosion as possible.
Braka and his pirates laid a trap, fired on the Athena (which was essentially a moving school with mostly kids), and was trying to steal their warp core.Am I the only one bothered by the fact that the episode began by stating how the Federation failed Caleb through extra-judicial punishment and then the episode ends with Starfleet executing a ship full of bandits? And we're all supposed to be okay with that? And then they don't even bother looking for Paul Giamatti?
The Federation: bloodthirsty? I've heard the Federation be called a lot of things over the years... arrogant, judgmental, a bit subversive, etc. (And I'd actually agree with much of those things.) But bloodthirsty?I mean I liked episode 2 more than this one. lol
But also either the Federation is the organization of morals and whatnot or they're just as bloodthirsty Klingon-Dominion hybrids who shoot first and ask questions later. They can't really seem to choose what they are.
Like you have Kirk feeling bad for killing the Borg-Humans in SNW despite the fact that they murdered countless people in order to maintain their colony ship... like if anyone deserved to die, they did. It just seems to depend entirely on the writing beat they want to end on, which is something they're totally in control of.
I just rewatched the sequence and that doesn't really track with how it’s portrayed. Ake specifically orders: “Blow that ship to hell.” Which Ya promptly does (“With pleasure, Captain”). You are right that we don’t see it fully explode, but the intention of the script seems to be to have Ake order complete destruction instead of just disabling their weapons.
Sisko is an accessory to murder for crying out loud and used biogenic weapons against the maquis.
That was his parents.Janeway also used a biological weapon (Icheb) against the Borg.
was his parents.
Re: Why didn’t immediately recapture Braka in that escape pod? That’s assuming Caleb was able to communicate the fact that he used one quickly enough to the bridge. And even though we don't see it warp away, I’m going out on a limb and assume escape pods in the 32nd century are warp-capable, so that he was long gone when Ake on the bridge was made aware of what had happened.

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