^Me too. Sisko goes to 'heaven' and Dukat goes to 'hell'. I could write a better ending in my sleep. Come to think of it, I probably have. 

^Me too. Sisko goes to 'heaven' and Dukat goes to 'hell'. I could write a better ending in my sleep. Come to think of it, I probably have.![]()
Dukat goes insane and spends the rest of his life in a prison/asylum. Sisko leaves Starfleet, marries Kasidy and lives out his life in peace on Bajor.
What I'd like to see is a new mini series or perhaps even a new full series that takes place 10-15 years after DS9 left off. Since Sisko originally said they could return him at anytime or place, they should start a small mini series involving him coming back, and somehow needing to get the old crew back together (Odo back from the Founders, perhaps even the founders helping, O'Brien back from Earth, Worf back from the Empire, etc.)
Dukat goes insane and spends the rest of his life in a prison/asylum. Sisko leaves Starfleet, marries Kasidy and lives out his life in peace on Bajor.
IT is the default ending to any story and sadly is often the one used. Bad guy is killed or jailed, good guy lives happily ever after.
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What I'd like to see is a new mini series or perhaps even a new full series that takes place 10-15 years after DS9 left off. Since Sisko originally said they could return him at anytime or place, they should start a small mini series involving him coming back, and somehow needing to get the old crew back together (Odo back from the Founders, perhaps even the founders helping, O'Brien back from Earth, Worf back from the Empire, etc.)
Sisko goes to 'heaven' and Dukat goes to 'hell'.
One might say those two scenarios are the same thing.Dukat goes insane and spends the rest of his life in a prison/asylum. Sisko leaves Starfleet, marries Kasidy and lives out his life in peace on Bajor.
What if instead of losing his grip on reality when Ziyal died, he instead came to grips with it for the first time?
I don't think anybody else would've been interested in the ending I would want to see in a DS9 AU.
What if instead of losing his grip on reality when Ziyal died, he instead came to grips with it for the first time? What if he blamed himself and started to realize the depths of his sins? And what would happen if he got into the hands of the Bajorans? I think there'd be a lot of very serious debate over what is the just penalty when someone who has done such incredibly monstrous things as Dukat does has repented. I think too there would be debate over whether such a thing could ever be believed. And I think ultimately it would end with Dukat going to his death (I'm not sure if the Bajorans believe in the death penalty, but I imagine that for him an exception might be made). In the end I think the feeling of that moment would be much like the death of Sydney Carton at the end of A Tale of Two Cities. (And I should point out that the relationship between Carton and Darnay in that book is such that the two of them are pretty much the same person--just having made different decisions with their lives.) And from there the Bajorans would never have an answer: has this man begun his eternal torment, or does he finally have peace? And how to feel about having to forgive even someone like him?
(In a lot of ways I also mirror the story of St. Paul there--who was guilty of war crimes before his conversion, and really DID experience such an extreme shift in moral outlook. Some of the things Paul says about himself, and about that realization of what he had been, would probably inform a character like this.)
Oh well, though...I don't think anyone else would've been interested in that but me.
I would. It would be far more interesting to watch than any of the other proposed endings (Dukat being 'gunned down', Dukat spending the rest of his time in an insane asylum, or the actual ending - Dukat falling into the 'Hell').I don't think anybody else would've been interested in the ending I would want to see in a DS9 AU.
What if instead of losing his grip on reality when Ziyal died, he instead came to grips with it for the first time? What if he blamed himself and started to realize the depths of his sins? And what would happen if he got into the hands of the Bajorans? I think there'd be a lot of very serious debate over what is the just penalty when someone who has done such incredibly monstrous things as Dukat does has repented. I think too there would be debate over whether such a thing could ever be believed. And I think ultimately it would end with Dukat going to his death (I'm not sure if the Bajorans believe in the death penalty, but I imagine that for him an exception might be made). In the end I think the feeling of that moment would be much like the death of Sydney Carton at the end of A Tale of Two Cities. (And I should point out that the relationship between Carton and Darnay in that book is such that the two of them are pretty much the same person--just having made different decisions with their lives.) And from there the Bajorans would never have an answer: has this man begun his eternal torment, or does he finally have peace? And how to feel about having to forgive even someone like him?
(In a lot of ways I also mirror the story of St. Paul there--who was guilty of war crimes before his conversion, and really DID experience such an extreme shift in moral outlook. Some of the things Paul says about himself, and about that realization of what he had been, would probably inform a character like this.)
Oh well, though...I don't think anyone else would've been interested in that but me.
I would. It would be far more interesting to watch than any of the other proposed endings (Dukat being 'gunned down', Dukat spending the rest of his time in an insane asylum, or the actual ending - Dukat falling into the 'Hell').
Now, there are some actors I think ARE a bit more versatile and able to play both good guys and bad guys (for some reason I think Marc Alaimo could do it and do it well, if someone decided to break from the usual typecasting he gets)
It shouldn't be hard - people usually say that he's really sweet IRL...
Isn't it tiresome how some actors get typecast as bad guys? I never can understand why. Hollywood casting directors are so unimaginative.
Yeah, I'll never understand the heavy handed swipes people take at Brooks for his portrayal of Sisko. I'm not going to deny that he had some cringe worthy moments. Hell, his portrayal of Sisko in By Inferno's Light to In Purgatory's Shadow bordered on skitzophrenic. But the same type of ham acting that Shatner displayed is accepted with a nod and a wink. Meanwhile accepting Brooks bad moments gets chalked up to some bullshit affirmative action argument.
The conclusion to the Emissary storyline really needed to be handled separately from the Dominion War arc. The writers were undoubtedly faced with a basic problem here: the desire for max ratings for the finale dictated that the Dominion war culminate in the show's last episode, while the desire to have Sisko join the prophets in the Celestial Temple (foreshadowed for quite some time and arguably since the series' pilot) prevented the writers from finishing the Emissary storyline earlier in the season.
In a perfect world, the Dominion war arc would have started earlier and ended, say, two or three episodes before the finale, and a final arc would have dealt with Sisko and Dukat's fate along with Bajor's entry into the Federation.
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