I wasn‘t the biggest fan of the finale this season, but apart from everything that didn‘t work for me in terms of plot there was one moment that did particularly irk me, and I‘m curious what others think.
I‘m talking about the scene where Mirror Georgiou finally prevails over Control‘ed Leland and by all appearances kills him in what‘s portrayed as a pretty painful death. Georgiou is visibly joyful to observe his demise and grins gleefully.
Then I read this in an interview with series producer Michelle Paradise ...
Which has me wondering whether we as an audience are supposed to cheer Georgiou on in her callousness. I get being a fan of a morally ambiguous character, I really do. Dukat, for example, was a rather interesting character on DS9 and I loved to watch Alaimo portray his demise. But I never felt the writers wanted me to applaud his vicious, violent deeds.
Sure, Control was a threat that needed to be stopped, there didn‘t seem to be time or an opportunity for mercy. And Georgiou is a human being from a universe where all she learned was to kill or be killed. It‘s all she knows.
But do the writers expect me to delight in watching a character enjoying the painful death of another being?
I‘m talking about the scene where Mirror Georgiou finally prevails over Control‘ed Leland and by all appearances kills him in what‘s portrayed as a pretty painful death. Georgiou is visibly joyful to observe his demise and grins gleefully.
Then I read this in an interview with series producer Michelle Paradise ...
TREKCORE: And it certainly gives Georgiou a hero moment for the season, after being such a villain last year…
PARADISE: Yeah, and I just have to say that the moment [where Leland is defeated], Michelle [Yeoh] just plays that character so beautifully. The moment where she’s watching him die, and she just smiled… I never cease to be delighted by that moment.
Which has me wondering whether we as an audience are supposed to cheer Georgiou on in her callousness. I get being a fan of a morally ambiguous character, I really do. Dukat, for example, was a rather interesting character on DS9 and I loved to watch Alaimo portray his demise. But I never felt the writers wanted me to applaud his vicious, violent deeds.
Sure, Control was a threat that needed to be stopped, there didn‘t seem to be time or an opportunity for mercy. And Georgiou is a human being from a universe where all she learned was to kill or be killed. It‘s all she knows.
But do the writers expect me to delight in watching a character enjoying the painful death of another being?