It's another shot, close to this one, right after Martok fights, and the Jem Hadar are walking away, in the background, two Jem Hadar are walking away, and it looks like one is putting his arm around the shoulder of the other Jem Hadar.
It's quick and hard to make out, but that's what it looks like, can anyone see this one too, and get a shot of it?
3 different versions of how Curzon died, all of which contradict each other.
- Rom is a completely different person in the early episodes than he is later on
- Rom trying to murder Quark is way over the line of acceptable behaviour yet Rom is still portrayed as an amazingly good person in later episodes
O'Brien changeling and his cohorts disappear out of the series, out of the blue instead of causing some trouble like they ominously alluded to.
.- Worf promises to be a good father to Alex and teach him how to be a Klingon; then sends him away and abandons him again a few weeks later
Navaros;3131676- said:All the things they decided to do at the last minute and then pretend it retconned in fine with earlier episodes that fundamentally contradict it created ludicrous plotholes that cannot be legitimately explained away with fan-made fabrications (although said fabrications are often attempted). Ie: the Bashir changeling, the Martok changeling, the wormhole aliens not knowing what humanity is and thinking the Sisko is their enemy even though prior to that point, they had already pre-meditated his birth with exacting detail for the express purpose that he is pre-destined to do their will etc. etc.![]()
- Letting the escape pods go to 'decrease morale' is utterly ridiculous. Morale doesn't matter on a spaceship...this isn't the middle ages where battles to the death were fought hand-to-hand in the field.
- The Sisko harboring sour grapes about racism in the 1960's...should have moved on instead of holding all that sour grapes in him that far into the future.
- recycled stock footage
- O'Brien loves Keiko yet there is never any believable reason put on-screen as to why this is so.
- A counsellor (Ezri) suddenly becomes a bridge officer for no good reason![]()
- The Sisko goes ballistic and holds a grudge about Eddington being a Maquis traitor yet doesn't give the slightest darn that Kasidy is one too.
The wormhole aliens are a tough concept to get one’s mind around. I struggle with this concept of not experiencing linear time.the wormhole aliens not knowing what humanity is and thinking the Sisko is their enemy even though prior to that point, they had already pre-meditated his birth with exacting detail for the express purpose that he is pre-destined to do their will etc. etc.
So? It’s like Missouri being pronounced both muh-ZUR-ee and muh-ZUR-uh. Both are acceptable.- Sisko calls the Bajorans "Bajora" yet they are also refered to as "Bajorans".
Why does Saul Tigh love Ellen? Love isn’t always logical. Maybe she’s incredible in the sack.- O'Brien loves Keiko yet there is never any believable reason put on-screen as to why this is so.
She certainly had all the necessary skills and experience, thanks to her symbiont. So Sisko assigned her where he needed her.- A counsellor (Ezri) suddenly becomes a bridge officer for no good reason
--The Sisko visits Kasidy instead of Jake, what a shameful insult to his own son.-
--Sisko calls the Bajorans "Bajora" yet they are also refered to as "Bajorans". -
-The Sisko harboring sour grapes about racism in the 1960's...should have moved on instead of holding all that sour grapes in him that far into the future.-
- In later episodes Jem'Hadar are dumbed-down into mindless cattle rather than the fearsome individual warriors they started out as; again for the sake of easy plot contrivances.
- Quark agreeing to have his member chopped off in Profit and Lace --- yeah right, no man would ever agree to that, especially not Quark.
- The Federation are supposed to be noble heroes of the show, yet they willingly enforce a genocide; which is mutually exclusive with being a noble hero.
- Odo is portrayed as going to TGL to 'spread humanity'; yet humanity just tried to commit genocide against them and hence TGL will most certainly tell Odo to take h pro-human propaganda and shove it. Additionally, it is vastly OOC for Odo to still support humanity after they tried to commit genocide against his people.
- A counsellor (Ezri) suddenly becomes a bridge officer for no good reason.
-Worf promises to be a good father to Alex and teach him how to be a Klingon; then sends him away and abandons him again a few weeks later..
- Inside Sloan's mind looks like DS9.
- The Sisko goes ballistic and holds a grudge about Eddington being a Maquis traitor yet doesn't give the slightest darn that Kasidy is one too.
While I can't answer all of those, the part about Sisko being the one to teach the Prophets about linear time... That's just it - they don't exist in time the way we perceive it.
Sisko has to teach them about linear time. The way it came across to me was that the Prophets exist in all moments - at the moment Sisko is explaining the point of baseball, he's also there with the guy who thought he was the Emissary, and he's also there asking the Prophets to stop the Dominion fleet, AND he's also there after the whole thing in the fire caves.
- Worf promises to be a good father to Alex and teach him how to be a Klingon; then sends him away and abandons him again a few weeks later.
Well, Alexander is a warrior now, and goes where he is sent. That seems part of being a Klingon to me. However, yes, you're right that Worf's inability to be a good parent should have been explored in more detail, as it is the biggest stain on his honour.
Where do you get rape from that?- The Sisko bangs Mirror Dax under false pretenses which is very much akin to rape. Totally disgusting.
That's it! You found it! That exactly what I was talking about.
I just never seen the Jem Hadar interact like that before. Since it was onscreen it's officially canon too. Obviously the writers and producers wanted to convey that.
I know they have a sense of respect for fellow Jem Hadar, but it seemed like they lacked a real concept of friendship- duty was all that mattered.
And another one, for the episode, "Jem Hadar" - Third Talak'lan sounds exactly Legate Broca, the Cardassian who replaced Damar as leader.
Listen the voice, and then look at the eyes of both characters, what does anyone else think or see?
Usually when we see Jem'Hadar, they're in Fed. territory working, in battle/ a mission/working on a ship, or what happened in R&S. In IPS/BIL they were all together on their turf, so they could be more relaxed with each other. It makes sense there'd be more friendship if it was going to exist at all. And I agree that the writers wanted in touched on.
I didn't see Talak'talon as a Broca, the former wasn't as much of a suck-up. I liked Ron Moore's description of Talak'talon- he doesn't swagger, he's the best, and he knows it. It's on MA somewhere, he talks about him. I'll find it after Atlantis.
Edit (from MA on "the Jem'Hadar": Michael Westmore explains, "...what makes Star Trek so interesting is that you give the creature the same feel and meanness by putting little horns all around the face. It makes them dangerous - if you bump into one, you're going to bleed. So you know automatically that you never get close to the Jem'Hadar." (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)
Trying to find that "swagger" line... oh, from the script:
Talak'talan, like all Jem'Hadar, carries himself with a
certain relaxed confidence. He's not the kind of stiff-backed
spit-and-polish Cardassian soldier we're used to. Nor does
he swagger like a Klingon. He knows he's the best, and has
nothing to prove.
Since their culture is artficially designed, and based mainly on duty to the Founders, I've always been curious certain aspects of it;
where do they get their names - random computer results? Does someone actually give them their names individually?
What happens to Honored Elders eventually?
Since their culture is artficially designed, and based mainly on duty to the Founders, I've always been curious certain aspects of it;
where do they get their names - random computer results? Does someone actually give them their names individually?
What happens to Honored Elders eventually?
The books have suggested the First overseeing each newly hatched unit names the young. Given that the language Weyoun used in one DS9 episode contained many apostrophes splitting words into two, I'm guessing the names are words from the official Dominion language (Vorta, perhaps?). "Klan" seems a common ending, maybe it means "warrior" or something.
I don't know what happens to Honoured Elders. In the books, 22 year old Honoured Elder Taran'atar is unsure himself...
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