Hemmer was amazing and one of the best performed roles in the series. His death was excruciating but he served his narrative purpose. As said at his wake, he fixes things. That was his role, his narrative purpose.
He fixed Uhura. He was her Obi-Wan. His sacrifice gave her the final lesson she needed.
It's not "killing the disabled character." It's showing a man who transcended his disability and changed lives as he sacrificed his own to save them.
To bring him back would cheapen it. It sucks because he was so well realized. We liked him. That's the point. Killing an unpopular character is meaningless. This was great drama.
Wasn't thrilled with the Alien and Predator homage (SeaQuest already went to that well - I hoped for something more original for the Gorn), but this was a huge step up from last week.
And to everyone wondering if La'an will be back next season.... What's stopping them from including her in the next episode? Just because she's leaving the ship to go on some personal journey doesn't mean she's not going to be in the next episode for a few scenes.
He fixed Uhura. He was her Obi-Wan. His sacrifice gave her the final lesson she needed.
It's not "killing the disabled character." It's showing a man who transcended his disability and changed lives as he sacrificed his own to save them.
To bring him back would cheapen it. It sucks because he was so well realized. We liked him. That's the point. Killing an unpopular character is meaningless. This was great drama.
Wasn't thrilled with the Alien and Predator homage (SeaQuest already went to that well - I hoped for something more original for the Gorn), but this was a huge step up from last week.
And to everyone wondering if La'an will be back next season.... What's stopping them from including her in the next episode? Just because she's leaving the ship to go on some personal journey doesn't mean she's not going to be in the next episode for a few scenes.