• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Spoilers Star Trek: Discovery 5x05 - "Mirrors"

Rate the episode...


  • Total voters
    117
This is a totally valid viewpoint. However it didn't work for me like that.

The Breen worked well as a sudden mystery enemy on DS9. And it was nice to have an alien species not looking like all the other ones, having a unique visual twist & identity with their suits. For us to have some nice speculation what they really looked like, why they wrote their suits etc.

However that was what, 25 years ago? For new fans it's meaningless - they don't even knew about the mystery in the first place, and they got the solution first. And for old fans it's most likely not fitting with any old theories. The explanation for their suits (the two faces) is actually not too bad, I kinda like it. But I don't like the look of the make-up itself.

I think it's mainly because my biggest gripe with modern Trek had always been that it tries to be more of a gap filler for 90s Trek, instead of just throwing it's own ideas on the screen. And even if they have new ideas (like here), they always try to connect it to previous canon, even if it doesn't really make a lot of sense. I would have loved an Orion background character. But Orions being the main antagonists 1000 years in the future? Well that's boring. The return of the Breen was certainly handled better. But again, they missed their chance to make their own mark, and introduce their own, cool new aliens to the franchise. Instead they just crafted their idea onto an existing hole on the franchise, kinda' devaluing both.
A hypothetical new viewer won't be bothered by the appearance of the Breen because to them they'll be new.

A long-time viewer? They can leave their baggage at the door, or bring it with them. Doesn't really matter. Bring whatever you want to the viewing experience. I liked finding out and seeing new things about the Breen.

DSC is in its fifth season, it's not bringing in new viewers. DSC can show races SNW can't use because of questions like, "Was such and such known about in the TOS Era?"

DSC (and maybe SFA) can make the Breen their own, just like ENT made the Andorians their own and TNG did more with the Klingons and Romulans than TOS did. Just because a race was introduced in the '90s doesn't mean it should stay there forever and ever and ever, never to be used again.

Unlike the Borg and the Klingons, and the Romulans to a lesser extent, the Breen haven't even been remotely overused. They've barely been touched. So I'm not going to act like the Breen have been thoroughly mined and should be left to yesteryear.
 
So, here's a somewhat odd moment. Towards the end when the Mirror Enterprise is emerging from the subspace aperture, we see on the Disco bridge all anyone can see is a silhouette of a Constitution class ship, at which point Stamets asks "is that the ISS Enterprise?" That's quite the leap to make based on the evidence that was available to him at that moment.
I noticed that as well. Quite a leap. I was actually expecting Rhys or whoever it is that they've gone out their way this season to indicate that he loves the 23rd Century Constitution Class to identify it excitedly. But that didn't happen.
 
Why another ship? Our connection to the Enterprise and what happened to it in the MU between Spock and later with Saru is a lot more meaningful and is more impactful when we heard what happened to the survivors. One could say why use any other ship?
I agree with you on this point. I noted similar observations in my review.

Last week's episode may have been better but this one wasn't too far off. Go through any season of DS9 or what have you. Lots of dips and peaks, but not on Discovery.
Strongly disagree here though. Definitely dips and peaks in Discovery. In fact, it's having a mid-season slump like the past two seasons. Although, this season's slump isn't as bad so far.
 
Last edited:
A hypothetical new viewer won't be bothered by the appearance of the Breen because to them they'll be new.

A long-time viewer? They can leave their baggage at the door, or bring it with them. Doesn't really matter. Bring whatever you want to the viewing experience. I liked finding out and seeing new things about the Breen.

DSC is in its fifth season, it's not bringing in new viewers. DSC can show races SNW can't use because of questions like, "Was such and such known about in the TOS Era?"

DSC (and maybe SFA) can make the Breen their own, just like ENT made the Andorians their own and TNG did more with the Klingons and Romulans than TOS did. Just because a race was introduced in the '90s doesn't mean it should stay there forever and ever and ever, never to be used again.

Unlike the Borg and the Klingons, and the Romulans to a lesser extent, the Breen haven't even been remotely overused. They've barely been touched. So I'm not going to act like the Breen have been thoroughly mined and should be left to yesteryear.

Agreed.
And, the unavoidable problem with developing the Breen at this point is, a lot of people have already come up with their own ideas of the Breen that, in their mind, would have worked far better than what we've seen already.
It's a firm case of "the monster in your mind is always scarier than what's on screen."
But I'd rather have a developed Breen that doesn't 100% line up with my view of them, than not have them at all.
 
I have to agree with about the lazy writing.

I don't really like the term, either... I don't think I have ever even used that term in the past, but there were just so many things that point toward this. (Some that I haven't even mentioned, like Stamets making the jump to thinking it was the mirror universe Enterprise, considering he had zero information up to that point.)
Well, there's good writing and bad writing. It's not something that fans invented either.

I'd say this episode mainly had decent writing but not stellar. My biggest criticism is that the Moll and L'ak love story seemed weak and trite. There was no amazing writing evident in this script. But it was entertaining.

I don't mind the Enterprise having power. It's very advanced technology and it was intentionally used by the scientists to hide the clue. The escape pod is a head scratcher. It does seem like the writer painted himself into a corner.
 
Last edited:
A quick moment with Spock might have been kind of nice.
In my review, I said it was inexcusable that they didn't show a picture of Peck with a goatee!! How could they miss that opportunity?!

I understand the time and costs made it hard to get SNW cameos. And it wouldn't make sense given the time period. But to not have a photo of Peck with goatee is a huge missed opportunity.
 
How many theories of the Breen were out there that people actually took seriously? Two?

Publicized? Probably not many. But most people have an idea of something. Or they at least are expecting something to be absolutely amazing.
Some people are bound to be underwhelmed.
 
Publicized? Probably not many. But most people have an idea of something. Or they at least are expecting something to be absolutely amazing.
Some people are bound to be underwhelmed.
The key word being "seriously."

Is there some sort of unwritten rule that people's pet theories are immutable? Asking for a friend, because I'm genuinely confused? Like, I was slightly disappointed that Harrison was Khan in Into Darkness, and would have preferred him as Gary Mitchell, as one theory had gone, but I didn't feel that theory needed to be amazing.

I don't know. Maybe I'm less of an expectations person and go in to accept the story as presented, than catering to my own pet theories. Like, I just don't put that much stock in to them anymore. I did the whole Star Wars Prequel thing and that pretty much wore me out.
 
The key word being "seriously."

Is there some sort of unwritten rule that people's pet theories are immutable? Asking for a friend, because I'm genuinely confused? Like, I was slightly disappointed that Harrison was Khan in Into Darkness, and would have preferred him as Gary Mitchell, as one theory had gone, but I didn't feel that theory needed to be amazing.

I don't know. Maybe I'm less of an expectations person and go in to accept the story as presented, than catering to my own pet theories. Like, I just don't put that much stock in to them anymore. I did the whole Star Wars Prequel thing and that pretty much wore me out.

The Khan / Into Darkness thing was more just an insult. They didn't even attempt to make him "East Asian / Sikh / whatever". And yeah, it was never specified very well, but Khan clearly was never meant to be a white British dude. And everyone and their mother guessed it would be Khan anyway. And Abrams insulted our intelligence and outright lied to us. So that was a bit different.

For the Breen, I think multiple decades of strange mutterings about them led to people thinking that they'd just be so weird, so completely alien, that just about anything would be underwhelming to some of them.

Like people who complained that the CLoverfield monster wasn't nearly as scary once you knew what it looked like.
 
The Khan / Into Darkness thing was more just an insult.
How? For fuck sake, an insult implies a matter of malice in intent. Geez, that word gets tossed around for no real benefit.

Sorry, in order for my intelligence to be insulted, I actually have to value the opinion of a movie first. And I don't. I don't know Abrams, and I do not feel insulted. It's such a strange thing. See also, "Slap in the face," "disrespectful" etc.

Like, I need a lot more than just a poor storytelling choice to feel insulted.
For the Breen, I think multiple decades of strange mutterings about them led to people thinking that they'd just be so weird, so completely alien, that just about anything would be underwhelming to some of them.
Which again, begs the question, why are we letting our expectations dictate our response?
 
Star Trek has always had a problem with people's headcanons being taken as actual established canon. Australia being the last to join United Earth, Spock as the first Vulcan in Starfleet, women not being allowed to become captains in the 23rd century, Klingon-Federation first contact in 2218, The USS Yorktown being recommissioned as the Enterprise-A, Klingon Birds-of-Prey being Romulan designs, NCC standing for "Naval Construction Contract" and so on... whenever Star Trek refutes or just ignores them, there's always bound to be a few people who immediately declare a canon violation.
 
How? For fuck sake, an insult implies a matter of malice in intent. Geez, that word gets tossed around for no real benefit.

Sorry, in order for my intelligence to be insulted, I actually have to value the opinion of a movie first. And I don't. I don't know Abrams, and I do not feel insulted. It's such a strange thing. See also, "Slap in the face," "disrespectful" etc.

Like, I need a lot more than just a poor storytelling choice to feel insulted.

Which again, begs the question, why are we letting our expectations dictate our response?

When I say "insult", I'm referring specifically to J.J. Abrams lying to us. Personally, I consider a lie to be an insult.
I get it, he was annoyed that everyone guessed his "big reveal", because without that sort of thing he has no other narrative tricks. But, "for fuck sake", he shoulda just kept his mouth shut instead of bald-faced lying. THAT was the insult. Everything else around it was just stupid. Casting Cumberbatch was stupid and borderline racist / offensive, but not insulting.

I would posit it's human nature to let expectations dictate responses. That's where phrases like "tempering your expectations" come from.
I can see WHY people might be disappointed that the Breen reveal wasn't a bit more "out there", but I don't necessarily agree that it means the Breen reveal in and of itself is a disappointment.
 
For the Breen, I think multiple decades of strange mutterings about them led to people thinking that they'd just be so weird, so completely alien, that just about anything would be underwhelming to some of them.

Like people who complained that the CLoverfield monster wasn't nearly as scary once you knew what it looked like.

Not explaining how things work is important in horror, because horror has a phantasmagoric element, like a dream. Something can be two things at once, and neither, which is part of what makes it terrifying. But science fiction is - generally - a genre which thrives on explaining everything. And the more you explain things, the less threatening they become.

I don't think this is a major issue for the Breen. But I do think this is how they defanged the Borg, turning them from existential body horror into just another Trek race.
 
I don't think this is a major issue for the Breen. But I do think this is how they defanged the Borg, turning them from existential body horror into just another Trek race.

The Borg were doomed the minute they introduced the Queen. From what I understand, it was a studio demand to make a villain with a "face" to fight, but it completely destroyed much of what made the Borg intriguing to begin with. That's why the Borg on Voyager were never as interesting or threatening as they were in Scorpion, where they didn't use the Queen.
 
But, "for fuck sake", he shoulda just kept his mouth shut instead of bald-faced lying. THAT was the insult. Everything else around it was just stupid. Casting Cumberbatch was stupid and borderline racist / offensive, but not insulting.
Alright, well, I will not agree on this one. An insult is far more personal. And Cumberbatch was out of necessity not preference. Never mind that Khan's presentation in Space Seed was also borderline racist/offensive.

I would posit it's human nature to let expectations dictate responses. That's where phrases like "tempering your expectations" come from.
In a franchise that espouses human growth I feel that clinging to this sometimes limits our abilities and willingness to see different points of view.

I can see WHY people might be disappointed that the Breen reveal wasn't a bit more "out there", but I don't necessarily agree that it means the Breen reveal in and of itself is a disappointment.
By your own description, people are going to be disappointed regardless. At this point, a bit hyperbolic of me but still, why watch it? You're only going to be disappointed with lazy writing, characters you don't like, and reveals that don't meet expectations. I've grown more and more confused by the nature of fandom the more I interact with it in the last decade. Like, man, this series really weed in your Cheerios, didn't it?
If it wasn't for Mol being easy on the eyes I would have fallen to sleep. Not a very engaging episode. C-
Surprisingly high for not engaging.
 
Alright, well, I will not agree on this one. An insult is far more personal. And Cumberbatch was out of necessity not preference. Never mind that Khan's presentation in Space Seed was also borderline racist/offensive.


In a franchise that espouses human growth I feel that clinging to this sometimes limits our abilities and willingness to see different points of view.


By your own description, people are going to be disappointed regardless. At this point, a bit hyperbolic of me but still, why watch it? You're only going to be disappointed with lazy writing, characters you don't like, and reveals that don't meet expectations. I've grown more and more confused by the nature of fandom the more I interact with it in the last decade. Like, man, this series really weed in your Cheerios, didn't it?

Yeah, I don't know why some people keep watching, either. I, for instance, had stopped watching Enterprise completely by season 3. I came back in Season 4, enjoyed it, then was disappointed when it was cancelled.
THere's still enough about Discovery that I like so I'll keep coming back. Even when they piss me off by writing out Owo and Detmer without even a good-bye.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top