If the writers thought the episode would benefit from a tension between Sisko and someone (I am guessing a higher up) then if it was Picard they should have found a better reason, IE one that didn't make Sisko seem like a fool...
"Dramatis Personae" I believe.
I prefer to think he finished the clock and it worked fine for the rest of the series.
The clock was of alien design; how would we necessarily know whether it was working?
Nothing's ever said or done to explicitly indicate that the clock doesn't work.
Does it really matter? Is it really worth an argument?Except for the fact that we've never seen it work.
Does it really matter? Is it really worth an argument?
Sisko starts the clock up in the episode, so I don't know where this "never see it working" thing is coming from.
We also need to consider that acting, even of somewhat reserved personalities, requires some degree of projecting. The purpose of the scene is to emphasize Sisko's difficulty moving on. It is heavily suggested that his pain affected his career choices and interpersonal relations. Unless his emotions are put into context--without being able to see how Sisko's emotional state affects his performance--the character's background is meaningless. It would be little more than fluff.Surely as a measure of how humans actually behave in a situation, having an overwhelming majority freely endorse the irrational, illogical behaviour of Sisko as entirely understandable (note the careful wording there) should in itself be telling, regardless of the strength of any given argument (and theirs do hold water).
Avery Brooks had to over-emote in that scene to help the audience grasp just how much pain he's still in.We also need to consider that acting, even of somewhat reserved personalities, requires some degree of projecting. The purpose of the scene is to emphasize Sisko's difficulty moving on. It is heavily suggested that his pain affected his career choices and interpersonal relations. Unless his emotions are put into context--without being able to see how Sisko's emotional state affects his performance--the character's background is meaningless. It would be little more than fluff.
Sisko cannot tell the difference between a human and a Borg? I must have missed that in all my viewings of the episode. What I saw was a man having a visceral reaction to the face of the thing that took his wife.
There's no "should" about feelings. They just are. What you do about those feelings is where the should part comes in - but not in having them in the first place.Not saying that at all. Sisko should feel grief and anger but at the same time he should have been prepared for this meeting with Picard.
Should Torres have berated Seven in Voyager for simply being a Borg?
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