That's funny...one of the "issues" I had with the Final Chapter is that Damar's speech, while important enough from a narrative perspective, lacked the kind of we-didn't see this-coming-but-this-changes-everything dramatic force that it should have rightly possessed.
Though it DID fit in quite well with a core DS9 and TOS theme, that was established as far back as "Emissary", and reaffirmed in eps. like "Statistical Probabilities" and even "Sacrifice of Angels", was that unexpected events can affect the outcomes of various events, even the very course of history.
Oh, and please forgive my obviously underdeveloped quotidian skills in my previous post.
Unfortunately, throughout TNG and somewhat during DS9 Worf is nothing more than a deadbeat Dad. He dumps Alexander on his parents (twice I believe) during TNG even after multiple episodes showing Worf pledging to make things work as a father. There really isn't any way to get around this. Worf was a horrible failure as a father and I don't blame Alexander one bit for resenting him.
I'm disappointed that Worf was presented in this way, because I don't really feel it is in character for him. It is a glaring fault in Worf's character and I'm surprised that so many people are willing to overlook it. How can you be honorable if you refuse to care for your own son and dump him the second he becomes a challenge to deal with? Sounds like cowardice to me.
Unfortunately, throughout TNG and somewhat during DS9 Worf is nothing more than a deadbeat Dad. He dumps Alexander on his parents (twice I believe) during TNG even after multiple episodes showing Worf pledging to make things work as a father. There really isn't any way to get around this. Worf was a horrible failure as a father and I don't blame Alexander one bit for resenting him.
I'm disappointed that Worf was presented in this way, because I don't really feel it is in character for him. It is a glaring fault in Worf's character and I'm surprised that so many people are willing to overlook it. How can you be honorable if you refuse to care for your own son and dump him the second he becomes a challenge to deal with? Sounds like cowardice to me.
Perhaps it make Worf more "human" as he is less than perfect. But in reality Alexander is dumped on Earth because they had trouble writing stories for him. Which is funny because "A Fist Full of Datas" is probably in my top 10 of TNG.
Unfortunately, throughout TNG and somewhat during DS9 Worf is nothing more than a deadbeat Dad. He dumps Alexander on his parents (twice I believe) during TNG even after multiple episodes showing Worf pledging to make things work as a father. There really isn't any way to get around this. Worf was a horrible failure as a father and I don't blame Alexander one bit for resenting him.
I'm disappointed that Worf was presented in this way, because I don't really feel it is in character for him. It is a glaring fault in Worf's character and I'm surprised that so many people are willing to overlook it. How can you be honorable if you refuse to care for your own son and dump him the second he becomes a challenge to deal with? Sounds like cowardice to me.
Perhaps it make Worf more "human" as he is less than perfect. But in reality Alexander is dumped on Earth because they had trouble writing stories for him. Which is funny because "A Fist Full of Datas" is probably in my top 10 of TNG.
"A Fist Full of Datas" is probably in my top 10 of TNG.
"A Fist Full of Datas" is probably in my top 10 of TNG.
IMO that episode is totally unwatchable in the top 5 of worst Trek episodes ever; a premier example of why 'holodeck malfunction' episodes should never, ever be done.
That's funny...one of the "issues" I had with the Final Chapter is that Damar's speech, while important enough from a narrative perspective, lacked the kind of we-didn't see this-coming-but-this-changes-everything dramatic force that it should have rightly possessed.
I agree that the speech itself was unremarkable. It is the brief and seemingly secondary Kira character moment that stands out to me. It is one of those rare moments where the important thing is in the background and therefore not overwritten or explained into oblivion.
Kira is only shown for maybe two or three seconds, but the moment is absolutely essential and the culmination of seven seasons worth of character development.
I'll have to take another look at this moment, and hone in on Kira's reaction.
Still, I find it a major disappointment, and a bit un-characteristic of DS9, that the speech, along w/the reactions of the station inhabitants that we saw, wasn't a more viscerally profound experience, as if time itself was stopping (a more dramatic score would have helped). I mean, think about it - The Dominion had acquired a new, scary, mysterious, powerful ally (The Breen) that had successfully attacked an important Earth landmark; Sisko had lost the Defiant, a ship that carried a great deal of personal and professional significance for him; Doctor Bashir had discovered that Starfleet had some role in poisoning Odo and the other Changelings; Gowron was in the midst of his stock Klingon power-seeking schtick; there were casualty reports coming in left and right; and so on. In a word, things looked really bleak, really ominous for Sisko & Co. Then circumstance throws them this sudden, unexpected, almost out of nowhere cuuveball, that, against all calculations, could totally breath new life into the fight against the Dominion...Both from a viewer standpoint and in-show standpoint, it should feel like something akin to the miraculous, or at least the exceedingly invaluable.
Yet the speech - and again, most of the reactions from the DS9 crew & cohorts - comes off as perfunctory and "normal", as if Damar were announcing a new statue of himself or Dukat. I thought it strange.
Then circumstance throws them this sudden, unexpected, almost out of nowhere cuuveball, that, against all calculations, could totally breath new life into the fight against the Dominion...Both from a viewer standpoint and in-show standpoint, it should feel like something akin to the miraculous, or at least the exceedingly invaluable.
Yet the speech - and again, most of the reactions from the DS9 crew & cohorts - comes off as perfunctory and "normal", as if Damar were announcing a new statue of himself or Dukat. I thought it strange.
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