So is it safe to talk re-watch again?
I totally agree with you, this episode was a good premise but the resolution sucked. How in the world did a Starfleet Officer (Jadzia) come up with an idea like this and think it was okay? She should have kept her nose out of it and let Worf kill him in the first place. And how in the world did a Starfleet Doctor even think it was ethical to perform such an operation? And for someone so bent on honor, death and all that, Worf had to know that this doesn't cover Rodek in the afterlife. He would still have to face his dishonor in StoVoKor as Kurn. Or did Worf blow up some military installation for him so he'd be all "honored up?"
And while I'm ranting, how in the world did Worf think he was going to get away with killing Kurn on DS9 in the first place? When he killed Duras in TNG's "Reunion" he went onto a Klingon ship to do it (and he still got in trouble). What was he planning to do with the body? When Odo asks, "Hey Worf, what happened to your brother that came aboard a few days ago?" I doubt "I killed him, but it's all good because now he has his honor," would go over well.
Here's a super fannish nit pick: in TNG's "Firstborn" Kimtar tells Alexander that Kurn and his cousins want to meet him, implying that Kurn has a family back on the Homeworld. What would have become of them after all this?
I think the idea of "So what happens to Kurn" is a good one, but the way they chose to handle it was very poor.
Last night I picked it up again, and things went bad. There was another phenomenal--phenomenal--scene with Worf and Kurn, the one where Kurn says he wishes they'd grown up together. Then things get stupid. Worf has Bashir wipe Kurn's memory, change his features, and change his DNA, and they give him a new identity.
I don't even know where to start with how wrong that is. The operation is entirely without Kurn's consent, which surely violates medical ethics. If a Cardassian doctor performed this procedure during the operation on someone like Kira to make her "forget" she was a member of the resistance, would we think it was OK? And they haven't really solved Kurn's problems; they've just killed him. He's now a man with no memory of his past whatsoever, which is a kind of living hell, I'm sure. Plus, what about all those retainers of the House of Mogh? They don't have any chance of leading normal lives now, and not even the closure of knowing Kurn is dead.
I totally agree with you, this episode was a good premise but the resolution sucked. How in the world did a Starfleet Officer (Jadzia) come up with an idea like this and think it was okay? She should have kept her nose out of it and let Worf kill him in the first place. And how in the world did a Starfleet Doctor even think it was ethical to perform such an operation? And for someone so bent on honor, death and all that, Worf had to know that this doesn't cover Rodek in the afterlife. He would still have to face his dishonor in StoVoKor as Kurn. Or did Worf blow up some military installation for him so he'd be all "honored up?"
And while I'm ranting, how in the world did Worf think he was going to get away with killing Kurn on DS9 in the first place? When he killed Duras in TNG's "Reunion" he went onto a Klingon ship to do it (and he still got in trouble). What was he planning to do with the body? When Odo asks, "Hey Worf, what happened to your brother that came aboard a few days ago?" I doubt "I killed him, but it's all good because now he has his honor," would go over well.
Here's a super fannish nit pick: in TNG's "Firstborn" Kimtar tells Alexander that Kurn and his cousins want to meet him, implying that Kurn has a family back on the Homeworld. What would have become of them after all this?
I think the idea of "So what happens to Kurn" is a good one, but the way they chose to handle it was very poor.