Shock value implies shock happened.
Episode title: "I Can't Help Falling in Love with Q"
That or she'll whip out her sonic screwdriver and prove that the El-Aurians are Time LordsYou want Guinan to go Fury?
The perfect honey trap, lure him in then eliminate him with extreme prejudiceWell no. I heard guinan ends up falling in love with Q. I think they go out Romeo and Juliet style...
Buildup and reason? You remember Tasha Yar's death, right?Characters died back then too, but there was buildup and reason.
Indeed, yes. And that was emblematic of the viewpoint that death could happen to anyone. It was done rather quickly in the episode. At this point, I honestly think the objections to death have nothing to do with past Trek and everything to do with personal discomfort with Picard, even if past Trek did similar things.Buildup and reason? You remember Tasha Yar's death, right?
Why, are they immortal?Killing off characters from great episodes which happened decades ago is a no no.
Killing off characters from great episodes which happened decades ago is a no no.
Why, are they immortal?
It is highly restrictive and basically treats them as sacred icons. No thank you. A character's death has no impact on my viewing of a great story. A great story is just that-great, all by itself.Killing off characters from great episodes which happened decades ago is a no no.
"How we deal with death is at least as important as how we deal with life, wouldn't you say?"
Kor
I believe that user has their name at the end of all posts as their signature, not attributing that quote to Kor.Actually, it was Kirk who said that, not Kor.
I disagree. Death is the final part of the character's journey. If you leave it out you on purpose in order to safeguard the earlier pleasant memories of their life I believe you end up with an incomplete character.No, not immortal. It just feels like a slap in the face.
"Hey, remember your favourite episode of your favourite series? Well, now we're going to mess with it 20 years later so it will never be or feel the same."
I believe that user has their name at the end of all posts as their signature, not attributing that quote to Kor.
*rimshot*I know. Just making a very little joke.
RADM Timothy U. Thomason, Esq.
No, not immortal. It just feels like a slap in the face.
"Hey, remember your favourite episode of your favourite series? Well, now we're going to mess with it 20 years later so it will never be or feel the same."
Indeed yes.That's just the nature of ongoing series. Unless you stick to anthology shows like THE TWILIGHT ZONE or THE OUTER LIMITS, new stuff is going to keep happening to old characters. And sometimes characters break up, go away, turn evil, or die . . . which is the way series fiction has always worked
For example:
THE SIGN OF THE FOUR by Arthur Conan Doyle, 1890: Dr. Watson meets Mary Morstan in the second Sherlock Holmes novel and they get married in the end. She eventually passes away later on in the series. Did this ruin THE SIGN OF THE FOUR forever? Was this "a slap in the face" to everyone who read that novel? Did this wreck the original Sherlock Holmes books?
Of course not. People are still reading and enjoying THE SIGN OF THE FOUR more than a century after Conan Doyle killed off Mary Morstan. So why should STAR TREK characters be handled any differently?
Indeed yes.
Imagine my surprise when reading the original books of Phantom of the Opera, or Robin Hood, or Man in the Iron Mask and how those ended. Not for the fans of Disney films, that's for sure.
Indeed yes.
Imagine my surprise when reading the original books of Phantom of the Opera, or Robin Hood, or Man in the Iron Mask and how those ended. Not for the fans of Disney films, that's for sure.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.