Sadly, Netflix didnt release the ShortTreks Season 2 with DSC S3 like they did with season ShortTreks S1 when DSC S2 came out, so it looks like ill have to buy them on BluRay or wait for Paramount+ to (finally) come to europe
Soliloquy is a conceit of drama, no?Michael's weird "talking to herself" spell when she crash-lands on the planet.
- Michael's weird "talking to herself" spell when she crash-lands on the planet. This scene had two big issues for me. One, real human beings don't talk like that. People sometimes mutter under their breath and the like, but we typically don't go into extended internal monologue telling ourselves to walk and the like. Two, it was entirely unnecessary. One of the few key things in scriptwriting is less is more, and the scene would have been just fine with almost no narration (except when Michael was talking back to the computer). SMG is a powerful enough actor to get across a feeling without words after all. So it just seemed like completely inept scriptwriting.
A person trying to keep their grip on reality. Yes, I have done that.But by Michael's own perspective, she just said goodbye to everyone minutes ago. But what kinda messed up weirdo just repeats their name, rank, and serial number over and over? Is it supposed to be some kinda centering process?
I read it as, she crashed-landed 1000 years into the future, her ships not there to meet her, and so she's trying not to totally lose it.I dunno, I'm willing to give the show the benefit of the doubt when it comes to worldbuilding and the status of interstellar travel. That part of this episode didn't bother me at all. There were two things that really, really continue to bother me about the episode though.
If those two scenes were fixed, I think I would have enjoyed the remainder of the episode much more. But since they were a major portion of the first act, it kinda broke my immersion in the episode, and made me look at everything that followed in more of a critical lens, rather than just getting swept up in the story.
- Michael's weird "talking to herself" spell when she crash-lands on the planet. This scene had two big issues for me. One, real human beings don't talk like that. People sometimes mutter under their breath and the like, but we typically don't go into extended internal monologue telling ourselves to walk and the like. Two, it was entirely unnecessary. One of the few key things in scriptwriting is less is more, and the scene would have been just fine with almost no narration (except when Michael was talking back to the computer). SMG is a powerful enough actor to get across a feeling without words after all. So it just seemed like completely inept scriptwriting.
- The scene almost immediately following it, where Michael goes from fighting Book, to begging him for help and tagging along in like a total 180. She has a survival kit on her...why not at least try and walk and see who else she can find? Look, I get it, the writers wanted to find some way to railroad Book and Michael together. But I have to believe there was some less clumsy meet-cute than this.
That is the question...Soliloquy is a conceit of drama, no?
Soliloquy is a conceit of drama, no?
And a serious question, because I don't know you IRL. Are you a professional writer?
Same here.It was pretty straight-forward to me.
She might be an aural learner. Speaking things out is a legitimate way to process information.If it was absolutely necessary to let us know Michael's internal state via monologue at this point, I think some sort of "personal log" which was recorded further in the future would have been preferable.
To be fair, Book said that for him to use Slipstream, he'd need Benamite crystals...
You’re not missing much with the short treks.Sadly, Netflix didnt release the ShortTreks Season 2 with DSC S3 like they did with season ShortTreks S1 when DSC S2 came out, so it looks like ill have to buy them on BluRay or wait for Paramount+ to (finally) come to europe
I've always found that to enjoy TV sci-fi in general, and Star Trek in particular, you just have to forgive some ridiculous plot contrivances from time to time.
It astounds me to this day.
IDIC.
I didn't think that there was. But, to expect some sort of scientific excellence with a universe with Q, with human psionics, with katras and on and on, dilithium burning up doesn't even make my top 10 of "Weirdest things in Trek" list, and that's a long list!
To be fair, Book said that for him to use Slipstream, he'd need Benamite crystals... which Voyager was able to synthesize on its own in the 24th century.
Its about 811 years into the future from that point... and VERY difficult to imagine that benamite crystals couldn't be whipped up on demand in a blink of an eye or that they wouldn't be widespread for Slipstream use.
Harry Kim mentioned it would take years to synthesize more (but Voyager had limited resources)... I'm guessing that since Starfleet analyzed the QS technology in detail when Voyager got back (and them having massive resources and ridiculously advanced technology), not only would they be able to find a way to create the benamite crystals in less than a decade, in about a decade after that, they'd probably figure out to synthesize the frigging things with ease and speed.
I mean seriously, sometimes I hate it how the writers ignore the fact that science and technology evolve exponentially as time goes on... so what... Starfleet has been sitting on its rear end for 700 years not making new breakthroughs?
Give me a break... In Trek, that garbage just wouldn't happen... however, the writers apparently MADE it happen that way.
As for using something else apart from dilithium to create Warp... well, dilithium crystals are used to stabilize antimatter reactions.
There's also Soliton Wave technology which doesn't need warp drive... you simply need a method to generate a soliton wave and ride it... which technically can be done with other methods (which again requires power).
Also, I'm actually surprised that Warp as technology wasn't phased out by the 32nd century...
Scratch that... I'm surprised that Dilithium crystals and anti-matter weren't phased out by that time frame - oh wait, they were... and were largely replaced by temporal technology (which was destroyed and then banned after the Temporal Wars).
How many different things did the crews of Enterprise-D and Voyager encounter that they said could be used as alternate energy sources?
I'm thinking plenty... just never revisited.
In Voyager's case, I can understand it was lack of resources... but Starfleet had that data and analyzed it thoroughly when the ship came back.
Hell, I'd be talking to myself if I were in a panic and worried I were stranded and my friends were lost or dead.
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