^It's an episode of TNG in which Riker watches a fictional holo-novel about Trip's death, because it was supposed to teach him morals so he'd divulge the secrets of the Pegasus.
As to the Picard fire it deeply upsets me every time. What did they have to do that to Picard?
What is this TATV you speak of?
If you're trying to make me watch TATV for a second time, it's not going to work.
It's the truth. I was familiar with the synopsis, had read posts about it, but didn't see it myself until January 2013 in a Fan Collective. I bought the complete series in February, and didn't watch it then. Eventually I'll do a review of it in my thread. For that, I know I'll be watching it 3-5 times in the days before the review. So there's no desire to watch it again for now.This is by far my favorite post on TrekBBS!
The problem is not that T'Pol didn't take Old T'Pol's advice, the problem is TaTV.You know how T'Pol was a stubborn pain in the butt and did NOT take E2 T'Pol's advice about letting Trip in? About following her heart? Well imagine if she had taken that advice, she and Trip might not have even been on board the Enterprise. They might have been off somewhere, with a family, or on another ship entirely. Perhaps they would have worked together on earth to further Vulcan Human relations or perhaps they might have been on Vulcan so that T'Pol could have a child. There are very good reasons they might have made a new life for themselves if T'Pol had followed her heart and Trip might never have died.
This is where it all goes wrong, though. I totally agree with teacake, here. It's not even plausible. The Picard family doesn't live on a deserted island, in a straw hut. They're in France, where, by rights, there should be a 24th Century Fire Department. But whatever, I don't care about all that ... my question is: why be so LAZY about writing this kind of death, in the first place?As to the Picard fire it deeply upsets me every time. What did they have to do that to Picard?
Well I think the idea was to give him further reason to want to escape into the fantasy world of the Nexus later on. It's a significant point in the plot that, unlike Soren, he doesn't give into that temptation, and accepts living in the real world despite his losses.
Maybe his pain over lack of family of his own would have been enough motivation by itself, though. The writers seemed to want to throw in a dramatic reminder of how he's alone.
You might expect me to argue your point, perhaps, but I won't. I happen to agree with you, because, certainly, there was some emotional manipulation going on. It follows, doesn't it, I mean ... even naming her Elizabeth, just to milk this whole "Trip loses another female family member" thing. I guess I am mostly talking about the direction, the way her last moments are handled. I don't know ... I just expected them to pull something else out of the hat, at this stage, just to keep an open thread, or something like that.I respectfully disagree. Killing Elizabeth was just as cheap as killing Robert and Rene in Generations. Cheaper perhaps, because at least viewers of TNG had already met those two. Elizabeth was a non-entity, whom we're supposed to care about only because she was Trip's sister. Lazy writing again.
This is where it all goes wrong, though. I totally agree with teacake, here. It's not even plausible. The Picard family doesn't live on a deserted island, in a straw hut. They're in France, where, by rights, there should be a 24th Century Fire Department.
WTF was wrong with Picard's family anyway, were they such luddites they didn't have smoke alarms?
Again, once Stewart suggested the Picard family not only die, but die in this manner, so that he could be seen weeping in a bucket, then ... the die was cast! "They" committed to it, included it and never looked back on it. But movies are very hypocritical, by nature, are they not? T.V. too, of course.I can't dispute the cheapness of killing off Robert Picard and family so as to give Patrick Stewart the chance to weep on the big screen, but to call it implausible? There are always going to be fires, and however well-developed a system is, there are always going to be ways that it just flops, sometimes. Obviously it wasn't merely a fire but something that kept detection and/or suppression and/or rescue operations from working.
One of the grand things in Arthur C Clarke novels is he usually has a plot beat where a reasonably well-engineered and well-implemented system nevertheless has that awful alignment of mishaps, accidents, bad timing, and missed communications that opens the crack just wide enough for a tragic event. We don't know what string of little things built up to catastrophe --- it would be unconscionable to spend the couple minutes of screen time explaining how it could happen, given that the total relevant information is ``there was a fire'' --- but I do believe that even in the 24th century people will die in fires.
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