Re: Was something wrong with Alice Kringe?
Because the Borg came off as too alien without the Queen, the audience wouldn't get the concept that Drones are slaves. The very definition of Drone implies the Borg don't think for themselves and are followers of a leader. The Borg have been humanized from the very fact that they started off "BOBW" showing the Borg enslaved an entire world. They enforced that by showing humanity within Hugh upon his separation from the collective. Following that evolution of story telling, the Queen was logically the next step. The Borg is simply a metaphor for slavery and how the slave master the is the single voice for all the races he/she enslaves. It takes the Borg from a simple dismissive species into a philosophical issue of the dynamic of slavery.
Seriously, how is the act of being taken against your will, being stripped of all your rights, culture and family and being forced to work in what is equal to a sweat shop not scary?
That was the problem.It doesn't matter who played the Borg Queen as there shouldn't have been one to begin with.
And that is my snide answer to that.
So you have a group of drones all connected together into one giant mind, and you get upset when that mind starts acting like one mind?
And other than to have a tangible villain, why do we need a queen for that to happen? The whole point of the Borg was that they were essentially like an intelligence connected through the internet, or a sentient internet itself. The concept was far reaching and rather scary.
Adding a queen does nothing but unnecessarily humanize them so the story can have a cliche "mastermind" character. The Borg without a queen were more alien, more machine like, and a greater concept because it was about an intangible ruling mind.
Because the Borg came off as too alien without the Queen, the audience wouldn't get the concept that Drones are slaves. The very definition of Drone implies the Borg don't think for themselves and are followers of a leader. The Borg have been humanized from the very fact that they started off "BOBW" showing the Borg enslaved an entire world. They enforced that by showing humanity within Hugh upon his separation from the collective. Following that evolution of story telling, the Queen was logically the next step. The Borg is simply a metaphor for slavery and how the slave master the is the single voice for all the races he/she enslaves. It takes the Borg from a simple dismissive species into a philosophical issue of the dynamic of slavery.
Seriously, how is the act of being taken against your will, being stripped of all your rights, culture and family and being forced to work in what is equal to a sweat shop not scary?