I have a feeling there aren't very many works of fiction in history that would be immune to the "Mary Sue" criticism these days by those disposed to use it. Kinda tired of seeing it everywhere, no offense.
Was it? I even went back and looked. I thought I saw something, but not the big beautiful wings.
It tells me I'm unworthy of HD-- maybe that would have helped.
There is a Moral Mary Sue, and Picard in this show defines it.Wow. People just love the term 'Mary Sue' that they can't stop making up new definitions for it. There is no such thing as a 'Moral Mary Sue' and the concept is risible.
Picard made himself the face of the Romulan rescue operations. He made grandiose promises that he said would be delivered on and weren't. Yes it wasn't entirely his fault they weren't, but people like to have someone they can blame their misfortunes on, and he did make those promises. Then Picard did make a conscious choice to run away instead of continue to keep fighting or even admit he couldn't live up to his promises, so that hatred festered. And he and we can see this laid out in the episode.
It's not an accident that aphorisms like "A promise is a trap", "You couldn't save everyone, so you chose to save no one," and "I allowed the perfect to be the enemy of the good," inform us what is going on here. I get it that you don't care for this line of storytelling, but to anyone watching it's pretty clear what it going on and it's not an unrealistic turn of events and it doesn't turn Picard into a "Moral Mary Sue" because by letting his pride and self-righteousness prevent himself from facing the music and carry one fighting the good fight, he fucked up.
No, Picard is not trying to right past wrongs with the Romulans, either for himself or Starfleet. However, the narrative is forcing him to confront the consequences of his withdrawal from public life, perhaps forcing him to rethink what he did. Indeed, two members of his "crew" were, in different ways, affected by his decision, meaning that he will be constantly challenged with the idea that quitting Starfleet (or at least retiring to his vineyard) was more than a bone-headed move.
It's probably the remains of a 150 year old paint job that the current owner doesn't really care about.
it still isn'tI was into referencing TOS ship paint schemes before it was cool. [*Vapes*]
Eh, yes and no. I get where you're coming from, but the show isn't even really doing that.
There aren't any actual "consequences" except that he's gotten a talking to from a couple of people. But he needed Raffi's help and she gave it. He needed the help of the Romulan warrior nuns and he got it. They complained slightly, but that was it.
It's also weird that the show is just coming at everything sideways. Here's a massive backstory with galaxy-shattering consequences that not only resulted in the death of countless people but also shattered Picard....and yet the show isn't actually dealing with any of those issues in any real way. It's about something else entirely.
There is a Moral Mary Sue, and Picard in this show defines it.
It's not just that he wasnt ENTIRELY responsible for the decision to stop the rescue mission, it is that they present him as having ZERO responsibility for it. He argued against it. Staked his career on it. And they still said no. They did. Not him. And yes, as I have said they keep doing this in every episode.
They try to insert things that make it seem like there is something he needs to redeem himself for. But they are transparently false. So yes he said stupid nonsense like "the perfect being the enemy of the good", but there is no actual occasion where he did that.
It is just a line they give him to say, to make it seem like there is a personally redemptive story here. But Starfleet didnt give him an imperfect Fleet, and he refused. It is that there would be NO fleet and NO ships. They are cutting the Romulans loose, and Clancy says 14 years later that she still thinks that was the right call. Period. Request denied. Not his fault.
Seven!Although it was a shame seeing Jeri Ryan's name in the opening credits as it spoiled the surprise. It was still fun seeing her pop up at the end and be the one fighting Picard.
I just hummed along to the theme music as I went out to get some drinks from the fridge, so I was lucky to avoid it too. So it was a genuine surprise for me and I jumped with glee when she appeared in the transporter beam.Looks like I'm one of the luckier guys on this board. I don't actually ever watch the credits anymore; while they're playing I do something else in another browser tab until they're over. So I went unspoiled.
Arguably, they are trying something that hasn't really been done with a mainstream science-fiction show too much, if ever. I think the dreams in the first couple episodes and the anger during the interview with the reporter are meant to inform us how deep that stuff runs emotionally for him but it's taken a bit of backseat now.
The show has implied Picard was, "Fulfill all my promises to the Romulans or I resign." He wouldn't be saying the things he does if he didn't recognize they had some validity to him as a person. Since we haven't gotten to see his resignation from Star Fleet as it happened, we are left with how people see it 15 years on and how they remember it.
And sure, maybe Starfleet said "no, you get no ships." Did he try to drum up help from anyone else? No. He went home and refused to face the consequences of being the face of a failed mission. Running away, deciding he wouldn't even try to save anyone else if it wasn't at the command of a Starfleet mission is a decision he made that he has recognized was a failure on his part to live up to his own principles. And he's right.
Other than for the pure joy of seeing the Romulans humiliated, why would the Klingons of all species help Picard save the Romulans?Did he go to Chancellor Martok and ask the Klingons to save the Romulans? IDK.
Other than for the pure joy of seeing the Romulans humiliated, why would the Klingons of all species help Picard save the Romulans?
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