Putting a big spoiler right in the title the day after it airs?
That's the title of the episode.

Putting a big spoiler right in the title the day after it airs?
We haven't really seen Lorca yet. So, it's kind of hard to judge.Yeoh should have been the main captain. I like her much more than Isaac.
Still can't believe they killed her this early. She was a major selling point for me. Her and Sonnequa are great. Really am not digging the stupid orange alien (Doug Jones) and the AWFUL new purple sparkly Klingons
In TMP, Ilia was attempting to use "navigational deflectors" to deflect the asteroid in the wormhole. That failed because the wormhole overloaded the main power systems.
In "Mudd's Women," deflectors were used to protect Mudd's ship at range from asteroid collisions when he was trying to escape into an asteroid belt. That burned out the lithium crystals, but that was because Mudd was running away and not cooperating.
They tried to push the large asteroid with a deflector beam in "The Paradise Syndrome." That too failed and burned out circuits, but that was something huge enough to wipe out all life on the planet.
@cultcross got it right. They could have used the Trek tech in some reasonable way to assist in this situation. They could have even sent other people, like a couple of security guards, with the First Officer. But no, they had to have a Dramatic Moment and create Dramatic Tension when she was doubted at first that there were even Klingons.
Or Lorca is and has recruited people into whatever mission he's on, using his authority as a Starfleet captain. The crew are clueless and will find out as the season goes on.
In any case, it feels to me that these two first episodes are effectively the opening teaser to the DS9 series premiere "Emissary". This is Burnham's Wolf 359, which she tried and failed to do the right thing, and becoming a PTSD-addled survivor who has to surmount massive emotional trauma when sent on her next assignment. It was a big, flashy opener, laying out in graphic detail WHY Burnham is a hardened but vulnerable mess, but next week is when the show REALLY gets down to business, using her upbringing AND this incident in her role as the gateway character to the main story arc.
Mark
Yet they understood that it was a real possibility that the Federation communications satellite had been intentionally damaged to lure the ship into an ambush? Seriously?neither were they planning on sending her into a fight.
That's how Starfleet distributes ships: there are either sectors with ships but no Constitution classes, and sectors in which there is only the Enterprise that can respond.None nearby - this was on the far border of Federation space - they sent what was in the vicinity.
It's entirely possible I am getting more sensitive to is as I get older, and I just want to enjoy things. Craig Mazin has a thing he's been trying called Positive Moviegoing, and it is kind of where my headspace is at lately:
So I've been thinking... (Because, you know, I certainly wasn't working.) I don't think Georgiou and T'Kuvma are dead dead.
I think they're setting up that Klingon ship as having some kind of "mystical" (for lack of a better term) power - like the caskets and ceremonial "transition" play more into a literal translation of Sto-vo-kor. Certainly the concept of some kind of non-corporeal ethereal realm isn't new to Star Trek.
And the show has already proven it's willing to dive into the metaphysical.
I thought the choice at the end to leave Georgiou body on the ship seem oddly specific and beyond any thematic purpose.
It must be the prosthetics because previous actors playing Klingons had no problem rambling off Klingonese (even with those crazy fangs in their mouths, unless the style of their teeth changed as well).
Yet they understood that it was a real possibility that the Federation communications satellite had been intentionally damaged to lure the ship into an ambush? Seriously?
No, I can't agree with that. It's not an indication of imminent conflict, but the blasted satellite isn't no indication of conflict, either. The flyby itself was risky enough anyway, and she shouldn't have been sent alone. There are other members of the crew besides the science officer who could have gone in with her to offer back-up.Yeah, seriously. It was a possibility. Georgiou didn't dismiss it. But they didn't have any evidence of hostiles in the area and her mission was specifically a flyby. There was no indication that there would be conflict.
No, I can't agree with that. It's not an indication of imminent conflict, but the blasted satellite isn't no indication of conflict, either. The flyby itself was risky enough anyway, and she shouldn't have been sent alone. There are other members of the crew besides the science officer who could have gone in with her to offer back-up.
Well, I agree with you totally! On the show, I loved it also. Saru was great, I can't believe how well that expository prey-species backstory dialogue played. (Though I did keep thinking: damn, Doug Jones is such a unique physicality, this is going to be tough on the casting people if we someday need more Kelpian characters that fit with his look)
I haven't perceived the consensus to be as negative, though... maybe I am employing my scrolling finger more aggressively. I am starting to see one great plus to having to pay for CBSAA -- those that really hate it will not pay and thus not be able to post overly negative rants.![]()
Why
Were
The
Klingons
Talking
So
Stilted
Like
This?
Who says she has living grandparents or an aunt?What I am curious about is why would she not go to live with her grandparents or a aunt or something after her parents died? I wonder if they will explain this. Also I am confused. Did she go to Starfleet Academy because when she arrives she is wearing a Vulcan outfit and hairstyle that doesn't prove anything but I think it does supose to make you think she has been living on Vulcan.
Jason
The whole family might have been at Doctari Alpha.Yeah, what Nerys said. My grandmother raised me -- that was it, there weren't any others. Sometimes that happens. Burnham might not have had any other familial paths available.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.