Rom cutting a wire in time doesn't compare.
I don't know - if it was done well enough, I think it just might. Of course, I never saw that ending, so I don't know how it would have worked out.
Rom cutting a wire in time doesn't compare.
Rom cutting a wire in time doesn't compare.
I don't know - if it was done well enough, I think it just might. Of course, I never saw that ending, so I don't know how it would have worked out.
But as I made the analogy to Q, since he's a character that's part of that show's mythology and story, does that mean that it would've been OK for him to come to the rescue in any major crisis since his powers and character had been established before?
It works fine in whatever Q episode it is where the Borg are originally introduced. Q puts the Enterprise into the situation, so it makes sense that he resolve it, especially since it is a meaningful turn of events for one of the characters involved (Picard). Naturally, it wouldn't make sense for Q to keep showing up to help the Enterprise with the Borg, but within the context of that story, it makes dramatic sense.
SoA is similar, though it is taking place on a larger scale. The Prophets' intervention is an important part of Sisko's character arc, and because they are responsible for the Dominion's access to the alpha quadrant, it makes sense for them to restrict that access.
Obviously, the Prophets' influence should have its limits, but their influence is clearly defined and limited. The Federation still has to fight the war, they just don't have to fight it with unlimited reinforcements flooding into the alpha quadrant through the wormhole. If the Prophets magically brought the Romulans into the war or resolved the battle for the Chintoka system, or something of that nature, then you would have a stronger argument in my view.
The warp drive analogy is a poor one, because the Prophets are in fact currently responsible for reinforcements being able to enter the alpha quadrant (they are also technically responsible for the initial contact, but that is not the primary focus here, they are not being asked to undo what has previously been done, but to face up to what is currently transpiring). This is not something that happened in the distant past: it is happening now, and the Prophets have a choice to take responsibility, or not, just like any other character.
the two scenarios are in no way comparable.
Fair enough. But to me it is one of the high-points of Sisko's character arc and an example of good writing that Behr and Beimler combined these two strands of the story into one. And as I've said, the Prophets didn't let Sisko off scot free, they warned that their interference would come at a price, one that I believe came in the final episode.It baffles me that some folks think having the protagonists be bailed out by "gods" is dramatically preferable to having them resolve the situation themselves. To me, that's just bad writing.
I completely forgot about Sacrifice of Angels. I hate that episode's end. Lamest cop-out ever. Weak. Really, really weak. Stupid deux ex machina.![]()
You know what other one really sucked? The one where O'Brien lives out a 20 year prison sentence in 20 minutes and doesn't know how to deal with the return to the real world so he's about to kill himself at the end of the episode until Bashir has a poorly written heart to heart with him. The ending was pretty bad, but even worse was that Chief O'Brien's suicide attempt - a major character moment, mind you - was NEVER MENTIONED AGAIN.
I also agree about the deus ex machina cop-out on Sacrifice of the Angels. That Sisko never even paid the described penance for that, ever, in the series, just adds insult to injury.
That's the way I view it, and that was the original intention. Sadly, Avery convinced the writers to change things and had Sisko promise to return some day, and while I understand his reasoning, from a dramatic standpoint it was all wrong. Personally, I choose to see his message to Kassidy as something he "rushed" to do without truly understanding that he could never return to a corporeal life, but if other people choose to believe that Sisko does return after the events in WYLB then that's their choice and there's nothing to contradict it. (And there's novels to back it up.)"The Sisko is of Bajor, but he will find no rest there."
How is what happened to Sisko in WYLB not exactly what the Prophets said would be his penance in SOA?
Personally, I choose to see his message to Kassidy as something he "rushed" to do without truly understanding that he could never return to a corporeal life, but if other people choose to believe that Sisko does return after the events in WYLB then that's their choice and there's nothing to contradict it. (And there's novels to back it up.)
So how would you guys end SoA? Have Rom prevent the minefield from being destroyed?
What You Leave Behind. Because not only was it absolutely dismal, but it was ending the whole show. It's worse than when the Beatles did Free as a Bird.
The thing is that I believe DS9 as a saga ended with WYLB and that any penance which was to be enacted on Sisko had to happen then and not after that episode. Sure, Sisko could return but be so busy that he never gets to live his life on Bajor as he wanted, but that's not part of the story as I see it. For people that read the relaunch novels or still hold out hope for a movie or miniseries, they can put off Sisko's penance for another day, but I can't so I see Sisko's "death" as his penance.While I can see the reasons for your preference, I don't think there's really an issue with the revised ending where the sacrifice is concerned. "The Sisko is of Bajor, but he will find no rest there," doesn't imply that once he leaves Bajor he will never return, but rather that "he will find no rest there," i.e. he will never be able to stay for long, his work as the Emissary will never be complete, etc. Some of what is said in the final arc seems to confirm this, with the Prophets asserting that the Sisko has many tasks left to fulfill. So I think it works either way.
The consequences you mention are interesting and would help to explain the rise of the Pah-Wraith cult, but I don't find the idea of collapsing the wormhole to be interesting as it had been tried twice already (okay, once in reality and once in a simulation) so that seems a little bit predictable.Nah, my thinking is that a better way to do that would have been to have the Defiant collapse the entrance to the wormhole.
I'll never understand why people thought Sacrifice of Angels had a deus ex machina ending.
In the first episode we saw the Prophets close the wormhole leaving Dukat's ship stranded. In Accession we saw the Prophets move a ship through time. The Prophets do nothing in SoA that we havent seen before.
The Prophets haven't displayed the ability to interact with matter outside the Celestial Temple, they only appear to be capable of body possession and transmitting messages to a person's mind.
Nah, my thinking is that a better way to do that would have been to have the Defiant collapse the entrance to the wormhole.
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