Ever since I extended my renewed Amazon Prime subscription to also include Paramount Plus, I've begun watching two Star Trek shows: Enterprise and Star Trek: Strange New Worlds. And of the latter, so far my favourite is season 1 episode 6, "Lift Us where Suffering Cannot Reach".
I love it because it subverts your expectations in the best way possible: The mystery at the heart of the story is introduced well, built on gradually, and has numerous twists and turns to keep you guessing, going from "who's out to kill the First Servant?" to "what is the PURPOSE of the First Servant?". They successfully keep you in the dark throughout the 50+ minute runtime whilst also giving us some solid character interactions between Pike and Alora and M'benga and Gamal.
However, what makes it my favourite is the final twist: The revelation of the First Servant's purpose and Pike's final confrontation with Alora. It's one of the most heartbreaking, tearjerking things I've ever seen. Pike's growing fury over the fact that the Magellans force a child to suffer for the purpose of a Utopia and Alora's attempts to defend her society is some of the best written, best acted television I've ever seen, and it delivers a solid moral quandary without being outwardly obvious in the answer: "Should we force innocents to suffer for the sake of a perfect world or should we work to build a better, yet imperfect society?". It's exactly why Star Trek is so good: the examination of human dilemmas and moral problems through the lens of science fiction, and as the credits rolled I couldn't help but consider it my favourite.
But that's just me. I know there are still two episodes and two more seasons to go, so maybe things will change.
I love it because it subverts your expectations in the best way possible: The mystery at the heart of the story is introduced well, built on gradually, and has numerous twists and turns to keep you guessing, going from "who's out to kill the First Servant?" to "what is the PURPOSE of the First Servant?". They successfully keep you in the dark throughout the 50+ minute runtime whilst also giving us some solid character interactions between Pike and Alora and M'benga and Gamal.
However, what makes it my favourite is the final twist: The revelation of the First Servant's purpose and Pike's final confrontation with Alora. It's one of the most heartbreaking, tearjerking things I've ever seen. Pike's growing fury over the fact that the Magellans force a child to suffer for the purpose of a Utopia and Alora's attempts to defend her society is some of the best written, best acted television I've ever seen, and it delivers a solid moral quandary without being outwardly obvious in the answer: "Should we force innocents to suffer for the sake of a perfect world or should we work to build a better, yet imperfect society?". It's exactly why Star Trek is so good: the examination of human dilemmas and moral problems through the lens of science fiction, and as the credits rolled I couldn't help but consider it my favourite.
But that's just me. I know there are still two episodes and two more seasons to go, so maybe things will change.