• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Spoilers Foundation Adaptation Series on AppleTV+ (Discussion and Spoilers)

I really wished someone had talked him out of the Gaia ending because I don't think he had the skill to undo or work around it and I seem to remember that maybe he regretted that ending, though I may be mis-remembering that. I would've been okay if he had let someone else (or several writers) write a new trilogy that got us to the Second Empire.
One of the Second Foundation trilogy writers (probably Brin) had what I thought was a great point:
we know that Gaia didn't become Galaxia, because otherwise why were they printing the Encylopedia Galactica in ~1000 FE for the epigraphs?
Not sure if there's necessarily a story there, but at least if you don't like the ending it's food for thought.
 
Apparently, his character is a descendant of the one he played in the series premiere, the prosecutor at Seldon’s show-trial, and this connection was something in the cards when he was first cast in that role.
 
Apparently, his character is a descendant of the one he played in the series premiere, the prosecutor at Seldon’s show-trial, and this connection was something in the cards when he was first cast in that role.

I had completely forgotten that he had appeared on the series before.

I enjoyed this season premiere. It was weird seeing
Day so chill
. I kept thinking, "What's the catch?"
 
My favorite part was Dusk and Dawn watching the videos of the old ascensions. One of the things I like about the way this show is structured is that we keep cycling back to the same concepts, deepening them. When we first saw the ascension ceremony back in, what, the second or third episode, it seemed so solemn, so private. I wouldn't have expected them to be recorded outside of the memories of the five people participating, and Cleon 11 noticing something off about the baby seemed to be a massive change in the program. Now we see that it's not uncommon for the elder Cleon to try and escape; I wonder if that was always the case, or if that's something that only started when they became aware of the genetic variation.

(I do prefer to refer to the Cleons by number rather than role, but they haven't been specific about who the incumbents are, and we can't even estimate since this episode seems to confirm that ascensions don't occur on a fixed cycle, and this one is unusually early since the current Day is so checked out.)
 
I had completely forgotten that he had appeared on the series before.

I enjoyed this season premiere. It was weird seeing
Day so chill
. I kept thinking, "What's the catch?"
He's become The Dude from The Big Lebowski.
 
Empire has its own Death Star now. How fun. :)
Ending is interesting. I wonder when she made a connection with Dawn.
 
Oh my God, I just realized, this thread is flared "News" and not "Spoilers"! We've been making a mockery of the rules for years!

Anywho, we get a conclusive-ish answer on whether Hari's new body was a robot (he's human, or, at least, ages like one), but it looks like we haven't seen the last of the more personable version of Seldon yet. Empire has a superweapon, exciting, probably not great for a fading, desperate polity lead by fading, desperate men to have ultimate destruction in the palm of their hand. It turns out that the cycles of the Cleons have been shortening because they're getting senile younger, explaining why Day doesn't look like Terrance Mann and Dawn doesn't look like Lee Pace yet. And, most shocking, Dawn is working with, and perhaps for, the Second Foundation. I wonder if the revolutionaries' plan from season one came to fruition after all, and the current Dawn is a ringer raised by the Foundation, and he replaced the original relatively recently.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top