Alexander was repeatedly abandoned, of course I feel bad for him. Also I feel bad that when the Ent-D crashed he hit his head and dropped about 40 IQ points.
I used to think it was before Season 2 but when I rewatched "The Emissary" it's implied it's the first time Worf and KEhleyr did it. Worf demands they marry there and then or make a mockery of their union. It would make a lot more sense if Alexander was born prior to the beginning of the series.
Yep - until the episode ended and the reset button was hit. The same way Worf took responsibility for Jeremy Aster. I was frequently frustrated with the way these matters were dealt with on TNG. I don't care for how they handled Alexander on DS9 - but at least they didn't forget he existed altogether.Be a man and take responsibility! Hell, Riker took responsibility for a kid that wasn't even his (Future Imperfect)!
Anyway, the way he was portrayed on DS9 is probably a fairly authentic way of portraying a fractured relationship with an absent father and a deceased mother. He's a conflicted guy and screws up for a time in his life and we eventually see him start to embark upon a road were he gets his act together. It's not very satisfying see Alexander embarrass himself and be petulant and so on but taken in context of a guy who's trying to find his place in the cosmos after a turbulent upbringing it's a portrayal that's probably not far off the mark in terms of authenticity.
I had a hard time believing that with parents so genetically gifted that Alexender would be so weak physically.
Kurn definitely got it the worst, I think. And it was a story that could have been revisited, too.I love DS9 but I wasn't too thrilled with what they did with Alexander, Kurn or Kor. I was even a bit annoyed at what became of the Mirror Universe due to Kirk's influence but I did come round in the end.
Gowron's story ended badly, too. In the beginning, Worf clears the way for Gowron's rise to power, and Gowron stabs him in the back and takes his honor. Then Gowron becomes dishonorable and Worf is forced to kill him.
My paternal grandmother passed away when my dad was eight years old and his sister was ten. They were the youngest of eleven children. Their father married late in life...he wasn't up to raising two young children at his age so they wound up being basically raised by their older brothers and sisters...some of whom already had families of their own.
Gowron died in combat! What better death, for a Klingon?
OK Point taken. Maybe not dishonorable by Klingon standards and law, but Gowron definitely turned heel, from a narrative perspective. I just didn't like how he was portrayed towards the end.^ And Worf even performed the death howl over Gowron afterward. So it seems clear that even though Gowron was a prick towards the end of his life, he still died honorably, and probably gained entrance to Sto-Vo-Kor.
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