No Borg. More AI and Romulans...that covers it for me.
I've often wondered if by expanding their premiere Arc to three episodes if that took away time from other plot points that needed attention. And it may be that the Borg cube was established in the first season to do just that. Establish it for stories brewing up the road.There were not enough episodes for all the plot points they had.
I still don't get how, for the first time, they put Picard, seven of Nine, Hugh, even freakin' Icheb, and a whole cube of Borg drones into one show, and NOT(!) make that primarily a Borg story!
Instead, all that is just completely coincidental backdrop for a much more generic "robots-gonna'-revolt"/"ancient-anti-A.I.-conspiracy"-story that's essentially explained and resolved in one final episode...
I think this season would have been much stronger, had it ended with the Borg drones fighting to do their own thing (maybe a peaceful mini-collective, instead of being individualised), and Picard having to protect them from overzealous Romulans, who don't want renegade Borg running around the universe, given their history...
That is part of my frustration. It doesn't feel like a twist as more like a side quest in the Romulan story that is no longer about the Romulans but also AI. It's strange to me.
The problem with Seven and Picard is Seven is barely there, and Hugh barely interacts with Picard too, and worse Picard's history with the Borg doesn't factor into the android story. The self medication and addiction story lines don't factor in either.Seven is a counterpoint to Picard. She's a foil for Picard.
Seven and Picard have born witness to two different Starfleets (Picard sees the Starfleet that is good, pure, and noble. Seven, OTOH, sees the Starfleet that tried to throw HER out an airlock and left her son -- a Starfleet officer -- to die without consequence).
Having the cube be relevant in the final fight was all I really wanted for it and if they never intended for that they should never have let it move. And using the collective to heal Picard makes sense. If the producers want to ignore canon because it makes things too easy, and too hard to write, they need to choose different stories or plot points.I don't know if I think the alternate plot ideas from Sullivan are better, but I think they'd all make for wonderful storytelling as well. I often think that it's not what your show is about that makes it good or bad; it's how it's about it. There are a lot of ways to put these kinds of puzzles together, and sometimes I'm left thinking that one version or the other isn't better or worse, but has different strengths and weaknesses, and that it really all depends on execution. I think I would have loved Sullivan's version of PIC, but I also loved what we got.
I do agree that Elnor, the Artifact, and Seven are insufficiently well-integrated into the finale. I think that all three of these elements resonated thematically with what PIC was trying to do, but I think that that thematic resonance would have worked better if they had been integrated into the finale better.
My personal preference? The Artifact is back into orbit; it's holding the Admonition-Makers off, but only just barely. Jean-Luc needs to get Soji to close the portal. He does, the same way he does in the actual show (God do I adore that "That's why we're here: To save each other" line). The Romulans skiddaddle. Then, while Jean-Luc is on a four-way call with Riker, Seven and Elnor, and Soji -- it happens. He collapses. Jurati scrambles. Seven intervenes. Connecting with the cube and becoming Queen means she knows of a way to save him. But it means fusing the golem Alton is working on with Borg technology -- something Jean-Luc might not agree with. Riker, Seven, Jurati, and Alton aren't sure what to do. When he wakes up, Jean-Luc does not look Borg -- be he has some of the parts inside him, fused with the golem android tech. He freaks out at first; how could they do that to him? How could they put nanoprobes in his body, how could they use Borg tech to transfer and house his consciousness? But then Soji and Elnor convince tell him, it was them. They convinced Jurati, Seven, and Alton to do it. Jean-Luc, you see, after all these years alone, alienated from children, never able to hold down a relationship, unable to build that family the Nexus showed him he secretly wanted, has a family now. He has children. He is their father, and they need him. So, for their sake, Jurati, Alton, and Seven gave Jean-Luc a second chance at life. He can end it if he wants; no one will stop him. But Soji doesn't want him to. She says to him: "But you know this isn't why you're here. You know the real reason: we're here to save each other." And Jean-Luc realizes he can't forsake his family a second time.
I think that would have given Elnor, the Artifact, and Seven a better resolution than they got, and would have provided greater thematic unity to the story at hand. But -- hey, I came to this after thinking about it for two months, without the pressure of a tens-of-millions-of-dollars production breathing down my neck. Hindsight is always 20/20.
That would be interesting and has been done in Trek before. I see as a change without a substantial difference though.The thing is here the golem isn't even needed, assimilating Picard to heal him can be done with just assimilation. That alone would be enough to mess with Picard's mind, but given a well written build up it might have prepared him for that kind of situation. This is actually a good reason not to bother including the cube, at least not without far better buildup and emphasis on Picard's history with the Borg.
I look at the Artifact and the Borg less as a plot point and more as a backdrop. It’s a fascinating bit of worldbuilding which gives both Picard and Hugh some great character moments. The alternative was putting Soji on some regular Romulan research outpost I guess.
There was absolutely no reason to have the twins anyway. Why not just start with Dahj and have Picard accompany her right from the start?
Eliminate Soji, you eliminate the need for Narek, The Artifact, Hugh, probably Seven/Icheb, etc. The plot becomes much more straightforward: Find Maddox, then find her homeworld.
I never got that impression in the show. The twin thing was unique to the process that created Dahj and Soji and the other androids on that planet. I'm pretty sure the show says that.I’d always assumed that the reasoning behind the twin thing was because of Data and Lore.
I never got that impression in the show. The twin thing was unique to the process that created Dahj and Soji and the other androids on that planet. I'm pretty sure the show says that.
I was under the impression that twins were only a byproduct of creating a synth from scratch? For Picard they just mapped his brain and stuck it in a synthetic body.Another issue I thought of: If they always have to be created in twos, why isn't there a second "golem" which matches Picard's?
Because the Golem isn't an android, it's just an empty body.Another issue I thought of: If they always have to be created in twos, why isn't there a second "golem" which matches Picard's?
Because the Golem isn't an android, it's just an empty body.
I just saw a rumor that the contest to appear in Picard as part of a fundraiser was in fact raising money for the 2nd season of Picard.Proving llots of fans have no idea how Hollywood works.
By that argument there criticism of Picard must not be sincere since they get paid by the click...I'm really not interested in anything these boys o 4chan or old dudes on certain other media make up. But I do remember someone here arguing that because SPS got paid (supposedly well), his interest in the show couldn't be sincere...![]()
I'm really not interested in anything these boys on 4chan or old dudes on certain other media make up. But I do remember someone here arguing that because SPS got paid (supposedly well), his interest in the show couldn't be sincere...![]()
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