I'll be honest. I didn't/wasn't going to go back through 123 pages of previous thoughts from other posters, so if there is duplication, so be it. This is the first time in three years since Trek returned to television that I have seen a new episode at the same time as others.
Patrick Stewart is still a master of his craft. His speeches, his presence: he still commands the room. I was happy to see that they, like they did with Shatner in TWOK, showed that Picard has aged. My first thought when he and Dahj were running up the stairs was that he was going to somehow be able to keep up. I was happy to see he was out of breath and not the younger man he was even during Nemesis.
Speaking of age, I understand Brent Spiner has aged as well, but his makeup was really caked on. I also don't remember his contacts looking that certain way. His First Contact era uniform also looked frumpy and made from a different material. Yes, Spiner is older and I think we would've expected him to look it, but these things could've been addressed.
This was by far the best pilot of a Star Trek series since Emissary and may even take that crown once the dust settles. One of its strong suits was building the universe Picard now lives in. Having Picard, a man who had always believed in the loftier ideals of Starfleet and the Federation and preached it, resign over those ideals being betrayed was a strong reason for the character and can be linked to our current lives with governments turtling back inside their borders.
I was glad to see the destruction of Romulus was not retconned from Star Trek 2009 and is a driving force in this new world. I'm no time travel expert, but one thing that did bother me that Nero's interference during that movie hadn't seemingly affected this timeline. It's not going to damper my enjoyment of this series, but got me thinking.
I am interested to see how the two Romulans living with Picard came to be there, knowing he will also have a Romulan in his band later on. Have his attempts to save the Romulans and his subsequent resignation from Starfleet when they give up on the rescue given him some kind of special standing with the Romulan people? Is it a situation akin to the relationship with the Klingons being mended by the destruction of the Enterprise-C?
Yes, we only saw ten seconds of a Borg cube, but I am cautiously optimistic that the Borg will finally be laid to rest as big baddies. Voyager and to a lesser extent Enterprise had weakened the Borg and their defeat in Endgame hopefully seems to have some lasting effects. Perhaps the destruction of the Queen has bcaused the remaining Borg to become lost or disconnected, maybe abandoning vessels, which make them easy pickings for Romulan refugees looking for a home.
Bruce Maddox was such an ass in his one actual episode that they have spent each subsequent mention trying to rehab his image and I was impressed to see the writers remembered the handful of lines from Measure of a Man and that the character took Data's advice and didn't give up on his work and became a huge member of the robotics community. I hope they don't make him a big villain, but I'm interested to see his connection to Dahj and her twin.
One thing that did occur to me was the question: did Star Trek need a caretaker, a strong personality to come in and demand it be done properly for Trek fans? We've seen that JJ Abrams decided to reboot the whole universe instead of trying to do something in the canon that fans like. We've seen Discovery do the Klingon War and the mirror universe, but then shoehorn it into the timeline sloppily. Stewart had said previously that this needed to be special to bring him back and perhaps it made the writers actually write something new and decent to bring him back. At least the inclusion of Picard got us out of the prequel rut.
Patrick Stewart is still a master of his craft. His speeches, his presence: he still commands the room. I was happy to see that they, like they did with Shatner in TWOK, showed that Picard has aged. My first thought when he and Dahj were running up the stairs was that he was going to somehow be able to keep up. I was happy to see he was out of breath and not the younger man he was even during Nemesis.
Speaking of age, I understand Brent Spiner has aged as well, but his makeup was really caked on. I also don't remember his contacts looking that certain way. His First Contact era uniform also looked frumpy and made from a different material. Yes, Spiner is older and I think we would've expected him to look it, but these things could've been addressed.
This was by far the best pilot of a Star Trek series since Emissary and may even take that crown once the dust settles. One of its strong suits was building the universe Picard now lives in. Having Picard, a man who had always believed in the loftier ideals of Starfleet and the Federation and preached it, resign over those ideals being betrayed was a strong reason for the character and can be linked to our current lives with governments turtling back inside their borders.
I was glad to see the destruction of Romulus was not retconned from Star Trek 2009 and is a driving force in this new world. I'm no time travel expert, but one thing that did bother me that Nero's interference during that movie hadn't seemingly affected this timeline. It's not going to damper my enjoyment of this series, but got me thinking.
I am interested to see how the two Romulans living with Picard came to be there, knowing he will also have a Romulan in his band later on. Have his attempts to save the Romulans and his subsequent resignation from Starfleet when they give up on the rescue given him some kind of special standing with the Romulan people? Is it a situation akin to the relationship with the Klingons being mended by the destruction of the Enterprise-C?
Yes, we only saw ten seconds of a Borg cube, but I am cautiously optimistic that the Borg will finally be laid to rest as big baddies. Voyager and to a lesser extent Enterprise had weakened the Borg and their defeat in Endgame hopefully seems to have some lasting effects. Perhaps the destruction of the Queen has bcaused the remaining Borg to become lost or disconnected, maybe abandoning vessels, which make them easy pickings for Romulan refugees looking for a home.
Bruce Maddox was such an ass in his one actual episode that they have spent each subsequent mention trying to rehab his image and I was impressed to see the writers remembered the handful of lines from Measure of a Man and that the character took Data's advice and didn't give up on his work and became a huge member of the robotics community. I hope they don't make him a big villain, but I'm interested to see his connection to Dahj and her twin.
One thing that did occur to me was the question: did Star Trek need a caretaker, a strong personality to come in and demand it be done properly for Trek fans? We've seen that JJ Abrams decided to reboot the whole universe instead of trying to do something in the canon that fans like. We've seen Discovery do the Klingon War and the mirror universe, but then shoehorn it into the timeline sloppily. Stewart had said previously that this needed to be special to bring him back and perhaps it made the writers actually write something new and decent to bring him back. At least the inclusion of Picard got us out of the prequel rut.