Moscow on the Hudson was also an interesting movie. Certainly mired in Cold War imagery, but definitely more drama than comedic.
What a chaotic finale. It was like watching four different story arcs in one episode. Chaotic and almost confusing. And Q couldn't pay a visit to "Kathy"?
The date on it was 1996, which was the year Khan left Earth.
One of the tabs also has the date range of 1992 to 1996, which were the (original) years of the Eugenics wars.
So I don't think they were saying he created Khan, only that he had a project connected to him. Probably one to create his own Khan like augments.
who said he didn’t?What a chaotic finale. It was like watching four different story arcs in one episode. Chaotic and almost confusing. And Q couldn't pay a visit to "Kathy"?
the point was getting people to pay for Paramount+ (or whatever service it streams in their country).In the end, I truly don't understand what the point of this entire season even was.
No, it was just some decent ideas executed incredibly poorly.The show seems to be trying to operate on some elevated and artful level that I'm just not getting.
What a chaotic finale. It was like watching four different story arcs in one episode. Chaotic and almost confusing. And Q couldn't pay a visit to "Kathy"?
https://twitter.com/IGN/status/1522211267141902337
Hard to say this is the worst season of ST ever considering DSC season 4, but it was certainly a terrible season.
I feel sorry for Wil Wheaton.
Picard hugging Q….I’m not crying—you’re crying!! The Trek moment we never knew we needed, but we absolutely did.
The reappearance of Wesley was a real WTF batshit crazy moment. It was pretty random but nice to see Wil back after all this time (although he was acting far more like Wil than Wesley).
John deLancie has been brilliant throughout and I’d love to have learned more about what was going on. Wasn’t it established that the Q were immortal? It didn’t seem like he was committing suicide. Was it implied the rest of the Continuum are gone? I wanted to learn more.
I’m still not sold on what happened with the Borg. Why was Jurati’s personality enough to completely reform the Borg when billions of others didn’t?
I still have to pinch myself to realise that, thirty odd years after I began watching TNG as a kid, I’m still watching the TV adventures of Jean-Luc Picard and co.
If I understand what happened correctly, there has been a second nice Borg collective operating in secret for the last 400 years. They may or may not have finally taken over the primary collective after Janeway decimated them in Endgame. But these particular Borg weren't reformed they were nice from the beginning. I suppose you could say Jurati reformed the Queen, but two minds merging as equals is very different than one person against billions of minds in the collective.
I'm wondering if this is the set up for a crossover event series, since Wes and Kore can apparently appear in any timeline. Or at least an attempt to test the waters.
That hug![]()
As someone who enjoyed the premiere and found myself enjoying the season less and less as it went on, I’m happy to say I loved this episode! I think it wrapped things up very well and I’m happy Rios got his happy ending.
My main problem is that I’m a little confused about the timeline of the Eugenics Wars and WW3 now. Were there two sets of Eugenics Wars?
I thought this as well, but then how does Federation Guinan have memories of meeting Picard in 2024 of when she was still unaligned Guinan? Does this mean that when the timeline resettled back into the Federation timeline, a simultaneous reset happens to reinclude Time's Arrow and Federation-Young-Guinan chooses to pretend not to know Picard and things unfolded as they did in the unaligned timeline where she had never met him, or does it mean that Guinan just retains the memories of her alternate selves when the timeline ripples finally settle?
In the episode that we met Laris, we discovered that she could take control of other people's minds. Why didn't she just take control of Soong? The ability, once it served the purpose of bringing Picard to Lairs, was never brought up again.
I like the idea that Jurati/the Queen worked their way through the collective and after Janeway decimated them they stepped in and sneakily changed the Collective for good. Now I guess they do not assimilate anymore but just produce baby Borgs in chambers...?
Ridiculous and chidlish as it may sound, this season made me feel dumb - literally dumb. And it's goddamn frustrating.
In the end, I truly don't understand what the point of this entire season even was. I don't know what the reason for Picard's flashbacks to his childhood were supposed to mean nor I don't know what Q was ultimately trying to prove to Picard.
When he said that he would die alone, I yelled, "You have a girlfriend and a son!"
It jives surprisingly well with established Borg Queen history.Remember that before this happened, the Queen was never alone (without the force of her drones to back her up). If the queen had the backup of her drones, its possible the sheer collective will would have had a much easier time absorbing Jurati - and also, in fairness, Jurati WAS assimilated in the end... its just the personality ended up somewhere in between.
The Queen was also damaged (in the Confederation timeline) and very weak compared to other Borg queens. This probably placed Jurati and the Queen on more equal grounds... at least enough for the Queen to listen to persistent Jurati and change how she may have viewed things.
We also learned the Queen was basically craving connection to be with an equal and that a lot of other stuff was bs as presented at face value (advanced species assimilation may have presented an opportunity for the Queen to not just advance further easily, but to possibly also find a worthy equal if possible).
Picard hugging Q….I’m not crying—you’re crying!! The Trek moment we never knew we needed, but we absolutely did.
They pulled it together and it was, for the most part, pretty enthralling.
A few disjointed thoughts. After a strong, fairly nuanced start, Soong had descended into a very basic villain (and I hate the implication that he was responsible for Khan—doesn’t work for me and is another case of Small Universe Syndrome). The reappearance of Wesley was a real WTF batshit crazy moment. It was pretty random but nice to see Wil back after all this time (although he was acting far more like Wil than Wesley).
John deLancie has been brilliant throughout and I’d love to have learned more about what was going on. Wasn’t it established that the Q were immortal? It didn’t seem like he was committing suicide. Was it implied the rest of the Continuum are gone? I wanted to learn more.
I’m still not sold on what happened with the Borg. Why was Jurati’s personality enough to completely reform the Borg when billions of others didn’t? A lot of people had already predicted how it ended, but it was fine.
Id probably give this a 9 for entertainment value. I know it’s taken a lot of flack, and it’s been flawed, but I’ve nevertheless enjoyed the season. I still have to pinch myself to realise that, thirty odd years after I began watching TNG as a kid, I’m still watching the TV adventures of Jean-Luc Picard and co.
In SNW
When he said that he would die alone, I yelled, "You have a girlfriend and a son!"
Look, I have had this exact discussion on another thread and people said that curing her would have been "wrong" or "unethical" or whatever. Because violent mood changes caused by biochemical imbalance are the true essence of a human being and we are not allowed to change that. Or something.Just still cannot believe how many comments read how "beautifully tragic and emotional" Picard's mother's death was... And I cannot get over the melodramatic stupidity behind it.
Let's see: In Star Trek, a 24th century human being could not be cured, but was dragged down to a Victorian dungeon with a straitjacket, in the 24th century.
No reason to be confused. PICARD is not in the same universe as TOS, just watch whatever these showrunners are developing and enjoy.
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