A
Amaris
Guest
WILMA!It was instructing Georgiou to shoot a phaser rifle through Bedrock, thus destroying Fred's house.
WILMA!It was instructing Georgiou to shoot a phaser rifle through Bedrock, thus destroying Fred's house.
Agreed. It's the universe part I find most vexing. Quadrant? Sure. Galaxy? Eh, maybe. Universe? What did she do?!I would have to agree that the premiere episodes were a little unclear about this. What was the universe-changing mistake she made? Non of the options really seem to fit.
Very true.
Oddly, there are fans here who insist that because producers say a thing - like, say, that this isn't a reboot - that makes it true.
Of course Burnham was the only one concerned about Tkumva's martyrdom to begin with. So far, the action provides no evidence that she really has a fucking clue what she's doing.
Firstly, its canon, deal with it.
Firstly, its canon, deal with it.
Also the martyr situation is super obvious to anyone, how could it not?
Especially since you...it turned out being right.
One thing that remains canon is that the Klingons are very delicate despite being great warriors wearing armor and having redundant organs. Burnham killing the Torchbearer by accident totally reminded me of Quark "killing" that Klingon in "Looking for Par Mach...." What was the point of that getup he was wearing. His bat'leth went right through him.
Agreed. It's the universe part I find most vexing. Quadrant? Sure. Galaxy? Eh, maybe. Universe? What did she do?!
And if I were T'Kumva I'd say this loser fell on his own sword and died without honor. But then again if I were a TNG klingon I'd cover up the whole disgrace and blame it on the humans anyway.God, that's true isn't it? The Federation admirals should pray to their gods that the Klingons have a whole lot of warriors like the crew of the sarcophagus ship.![]()
Shooting and killing T'Kuvma.
Instead of capturing him and possibly preventing a war, she killed him and ensured a war would happen.
What did they claim, just out of morbid curiosity?
Acting out of emotional impulse doesn't exactly fit the dramatic requirements of "the most difficult choice a person can make." A moment's rage does not require an hour and a half of narrative set-up.
That's certainly a possibility. I think it's also possible that most of Starfleet blames her for the war starting without knowing the whole story (not that they're entirely wrong).That's what I was thinking.
And frankly, I like this a lot more than the nonsense Midnight's Edge claimed. This is heated emotion triggering political ramifications. This is my cup of Earl Grey.
Someone pointed this out to me yesterday - it looks almost as if the script underwent a late, hasty rewrite and that the climax of Part I had originally been:
- Burnham mutinies and successfully fires on the Klingons; leading to
- The lighting of the beacon to call the 24 houses to war against the Federation aggressors.
Not completely. It could have been handled in flashback effectively and not use 2 episodes telling what happened.
Interesting. That would indeed make much more sense as to Michael's actions. I did find her likeable though.That makes so much more sense than what we got. As it stands the motivations for various characters to do certain things, as well as the cause and effect therein is really muddled.
If there was such a rewrite I imagine it was done in the service of making Michael more likable, but since the aired version of her isn't likable anyway, all it did was undercut whatever her character arc was supposed to be.
Ugh, that court-martial. I liked the one in Star Trek (reboot) better, despite the unnecessary audience in that one.
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