Star Wars right now:5) The silliness of letting Nus Braka drift away instead of recovering the pod. Man, is that dumb.
Star Wars right now:5) The silliness of letting Nus Braka drift away instead of recovering the pod. Man, is that dumb.
Yeah I sort of just handwaved the destruction of the ship as "well, it's a special effects spectacle for the first episode", but it actually was a crap conclusion to the story and completely the wrong kind of moral angle to put in the opener.7) Ake quits over separating a child from their mother but openly laments not being able to transport the intruders into space & does not hesitate to kill everyone on the other ship.
It's not like strength is an inherently quality. Humans can train to be strong too.I also thought that Thok's Hulk like strength was silly, neither Klingons or JH have that.
Braka same thing. To a lesser degree.
I do like the episodic format and the non-galaxy or universe altering level stakes.
I thought Klingons tossing humans around like ragdolls was normal? (At least since TNG)I also thought that Thok's Hulk like strength was silly, neither Klingons or JH have that.
Braka same thing. To a lesser degree.
I do like the episodic format and the non-galaxy or universe altering level stakes.
It's not like strength is an inherently quality. Humans can train to be strong too.
Ok. I'm not grasping at anything. I didn't find it stupid.Lying on a deathed and flicking someone 20 feet into a wall? No.
You are grasping at straws. It was stupid.
Exactly.They became a bit of a joke when dinky Bajorans were routinely tossing them over their shoulders during the Klingon War stuff in DS9 (same for the Jem'Hadar, who can go against Sisko in a fistfight 5-on-1 and still lose).
The intent in TNG was probably for them to have super-strength but of course that's undermined a little by Worf eating absolute shit every 14 seconds. I can believe a hybrid has quadruple-strength, though, or that Thok is just a bodybuilder anyway.
You may have caught the scent.........
We've seen Starfleet Captains destroy enemy vessels with extreme prejudice before, so this is nothing new to Star Trek.Yeah I sort of just handwaved the destruction of the ship as "well, it's a special effects spectacle for the first episode", but it actually was a crap conclusion to the story and completely the wrong kind of moral angle to put in the opener.
Then again, plotting is still an area where Kurtzman Trek really suffers; the character stuff worked well for me in the first episode but the plot was still very vaguely structured and just sort of fizzled, as they often do.
The fact there's precedent for it doesn't make it less tonally jarring; other examples I can think of are them whooping it up after blowing up a (fake) Romulan ship in "Where Silence Has Lease" and Janeway smugly annihilating the Malon vessel in "Night", and I'd level the same "this is disappointing and feels out of step with the show as a whole" criticism at both.We've seen Starfleet Captains destroy enemy vessels with extreme prejudice before, so this is nothing new to Star Trek.
Personally, I don't think it is tonally jarring to take out an enemy starship that just attacked a ship full of cadets. The Athena was heavily damaged, Starfleet was still too far away and the capabilities of the Venari Ral vessel were unknown. Taking out the weapons and engines may not have been enough. Ake did what she had to do to protect the ship and the cadets.The fact there's precedent for it doesn't make it less tonally jarring; other examples I can think of are them whooping it up after blowing up a (fake) Romulan ship in "Where Silence Has Lease" and Janeway smugly annihilating the Malon vessel in "Night", and I'd level the same "this is disappointing and feels out of step with the show as a whole" criticism at both.
The actions make sense in universe, you just have to wonder what the narrative point of having the pilot episode end that way is, especially since the show seems to be leaning very heavily on the "this is an era of hopeful reconstruction, we should trust Starfleet again" theme. Compare it with SNW's first episode, which laid out its mission statement very clearly by having Pike shun the Prime Directive and instead make an appeal to compassion and unity.Personally, I don't think it is tonally jarring to take out an enemy starship that just attacked a ship full of cadets. The Athena was heavily damaged, Starfleet was still too far away and the capabilities of the Venari Ral vessel were unknown. Taking out the weapons and engines may not have been enough. Ake did what she had to do to protect the ship and the cadets.
In an ideal world, it would be nice if Starfleet could talk their way out of every situation or stop a conflict without resorting to lethal means. But the reality is that quite often talking doesn't work and you have to punch the bully hard enough they leave you alone.
The biggest joke was TNG S3 Sins of the Father.They became a bit of a joke when dinky Bajorans were routinely tossing them over their shoulders during the Klingon War stuff in DS9 (same for the Jem'Hadar, who can go against Sisko in a fistfight 5-on-1 and still lose).
The intent in TNG was probably for them to have super-strength but of course that's undermined a little by Worf eating absolute shit every 14 seconds. I can believe a hybrid has quadruple-strength, though, or that Thok is just a bodybuilder anyway.

The Venari Ral vessel had no shields, so I really don't think it's capabilities were very high.Personally, I don't think it is tonally jarring to take out an enemy starship that just attacked a ship full of cadets. The Athena was heavily damaged, Starfleet was still too far away and the capabilities of the Venari Ral vessel were unknown. Taking out the weapons and engines may not have been enough. Ake did what she had to do to protect the ship and the cadets.
In an ideal world, it would be nice if Starfleet could talk their way out of every situation or stop a conflict without resorting to lethal means. But the reality is that quite often talking doesn't work and you have to punch the bully hard enough they leave you alone.
So did many of the ships in DS9 apparently.The Venari Ral vessel had no shields, so I really don't think it's capabilities were very high.
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