Well sure he does, but his crew is the secondary objective here. He's really stopping Soran to prevent the destruction of Veridan III.
But if Veridian III is meant to die as a whole... who's Picard to interfere by going back in time?
Well sure he does, but his crew is the secondary objective here. He's really stopping Soran to prevent the destruction of Veridan III.
It's not so much a plot hole as it is a terribly complicated and contradictory McGuffin. The Nexus is, at the same time: a huge energy ribbon that moves through space and destroys spaceships; a place where people can find eternal happiness in a virtual world made especially for them; a way of traveling instantaneously through space and time; a recording device that keeps copies of everyone that spends time in it. Just trying to make all of that clear and relatively straightforward is be hard. Expecting it to make sense is too much.I think we're succeeding in identifying a plot whole in the film![]()
Is there any other reason to write anything?Especially as the only reason Braga and Moore did it was so that his Nexus experience (which was pretty poor) would have more "emotional resonance".
Is there any other reason to write anything?Especially as the only reason Braga and Moore did it was so that his Nexus experience (which was pretty poor) would have more "emotional resonance".
All those things would certainly reinforce a story's emotional resonance.Is there any other reason to write anything?Especially as the only reason Braga and Moore did it was so that his Nexus experience (which was pretty poor) would have more "emotional resonance".
yes, because it fits in well with an overall plot or story, because it conveys an important lesson about human nature, because it flows organically from character growth and development, etc.
It was like "well Robert had a good run and he was a prick most of the time anyway."
All those things would certainly reinforce a story's emotional resonance.Is there any other reason to write anything?
yes, because it fits in well with an overall plot or story, because it conveys an important lesson about human nature, because it flows organically from character growth and development, etc.
Amen. I hate what they did to Yar with the Sela story. I don't mind the Sela character per se. It's the fact that in order to introduce her, without the complication of a much older Yar now being alive as well, they felt they had to kill of the Yar character again.Instead, we can't even have that fantasy, because we get a shitty canon ending to the character that basically says, "fuck you for caring about this character (again), we're going to kill it off in a shitty way (again)".
Under normal circumstances, I would agree with you. However, we have definitely seen circumstances where when something has a deepy personal emotional connection to Picard, his judgment can be affected. Heck, look at how obsessed he became with the Borg in First Contact. So I do think it's in character for him to do something like trying to save his family.@Dukhat...you and I might choose to save our families from a horrible death given the circumstances but the poster was talking about Picard. Picard as he was in Generations and prior to that would not take matters into his own hands like that. He might be seriously tempted to do but probably would take into consideration everything that could result from that decision. Plus there's the matter of the Temporal Prime Directive (lol which of course was created later but we can assume existed and was imposed then).
if you're referring to "tapestry," I don't think Q's message was so much "don't try to change the past at all, ever," rather I think his point was "don't be ashamed of the stupid decisions in your past, they're part of who you are."If Picard had used the Nexus to save his family I think he would have had a visit made by Q asking him "Have you learned anything that I've taught you mon capitan?"
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