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Spoilers Star Trek: Strange New Worlds 2x03 - "Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow"

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I mean, Yuri Andropov didn't order any historic massacres but he's hardly a beloved icon of progressive world politics. You can call someone a tyrant and still believe they were better than the OTHER tyrant.
Has it occurred to anyone that Kirk, Scotty, etc. in TOS had a real biased and messed up history professor that romanticized their view of Khan? Who was their history prof again? TOS said John Gill. Yes, that John Gill who thought that turning an alien society into WW2 Germany would make them more efficient.
 
Knowing Toronto sort of ruined the episode for me because a lot of what they did made no sense in terms of geography and use of the city. It's better than if they had tried to pretend Toronto was New York, but it also made me scratch my head at times...

Although the most real thing would be a giant mega construction project that is delayed by years. That's basically real life. :p

As for the episode, I find the time cops pretty annoying these days, and I think the episode was a bit too long with things that didn't need to happen - putting Pelia in Vermont (or the use of Pelia at all) kind of stood out as unnecessary, as was the car "chase" in the middle of a city with no traffic. The episode is an hour long and probably didn't need to be, in my mind.

I did like the character work with La'an and Kirk, even if the inevitable reset button was going to happen with Kirk.

Although the other thing with this time travel stuff is that it basically states that human suffering is absolutely necessary for progress, which I don't know is what they want to say. It's like asking people to see the 'good' in WW2 and that it needed to happen in order for humanity to develop rockets and satellites... like you'd hope that we would have figured things out without the need of millions of people to die in a literal holocaust... but I guess Kirk also dealt with that with the whole Guardian thing so it is what it is.
 
I'm glad they did it, now they're 'free' to do what they want without contradicting the past anymore :D
And I'm also one of those on the continuum who want things to fit and make sense whenever possible - just ignore the snarky changelings ;)
Though based on the trailers they’re still going to stick with Fleet Captain Pike meeting Kirk.
I always wondered why Trek was so iffy about that. It's not like Broken Bow happened in the original timeline.
Yes it did.
Excuse me, as a crazy Captain Pike's fan, I waited an year for this show to see more of him. Most of the advertising of the show was built on Anson Mount's charisma. Nothing was done to make me ready for his less-than-minimal presence in the 2 episodes of 3. Is the season continues that way? Then I feel robbed.
Mount had a kid.
Didn't help that the the product placement stuck out like a sore thumb
What product placement? I didn’t see any product placement.
 
Spock in that episode did tell Kirk that if he saved Edith Keeler that millions would die who did not die before so Trek's always had this overarching philosophy of "the past was bad but if we inadvertently change it because of personal feelings it can become much worse." La'an could have killed her ancestor in his bedroom and walked away, but it could well have resulted in an Earth that was far more devastated in a coming conflict than it was in the recorded World War III. Without Khan to seize control over a quarter of the human race the eventual WWIII might have unfolded far differently and much more lethally.
 
Good point, but I think it goes towards my problem with her, they could develop her more, and give her morsels, but we never really see them come to fruition. Last week's bit about her being afraid of having leaked Una's secret was really just a red herring for the reveal of where the information actually came from. It could have been more, showing she's aware of her deep-seated feelings, even if she doesn't show them. I also wonder if her scene with Uhura will come back. It was a great scene for Uhura, but not so much for La'an, and I'm afraid we'll see her treat Uhura badly going forward because of it.

They don't develop her, they just make her suffer.
 
Just pointing this out:
The Khan of Space Seed and Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan is not the same Khan as we have seen since Star Trek Into Darkness. The writers have changed Khan's rule to something darker and more devastating. We have gone from "no massacres" (Scott, Space Seed) to someone who does genocide (Star Trek Into Darkness).
Not to mention that for a series that spawned the "Red Shirts" trope, no one even dies in Space Seed. There were close calls, but killing was never Step 1 in Khan's methods. And he only became a murderer in Star Trek II after Ceti Alpha V broke him. Treating this episode as a 'Would you kill baby Hitler' sort of scenario misses the point of Khan's character entirely. He's supposed to be a tragic character. Why would Kirk and crew vocally express respect to a mass murderer?
 
Sometimes the inevitable horror of war or a dictator's rise to power needs to be fully uncovered for people to realize the wrong and band together to not let it happen again.
 
Spock in that episode did tell Kirk that if he saved Edith Keeler that millions would die who did not die before so Trek's always had this overarching philosophy of "the past was bad but if we inadvertently change it because of personal feelings it can become much worse." La'an could have killed her ancestor in his bedroom and walked away, but it could well have resulted in an Earth that was far more devastated in a coming conflict than it was in the recorded World War III. Without Khan to seize control over a quarter of the human race the eventual WWIII might have unfolded far differently and much more lethally.
Yeah, there's definitely a whole butterfly effect thing with this time travel stuff I suppose.

It's interesting that the only person who was able to make a positive change in the past is Sisko... well, sort of.

For how "utopian" Star Trek is though, there's a twinge of darkness that millions of people need to die in order for it to happen. It basically implies that we'll never improve unless we watch people suffer in front of us... and even then, it takes a few tries because it only happens after WW3.
 
Though as early as 1991 and "A Matter of Time(TNG)" Khan was referred to in the same breath as Adolf Hitler as a dangerous and tragic name in Earth's history. Two decades before the Kelvin Timeline revisited the character Khan was already being held up as a dark chapter in human history. So a "good" tyrant or not he was sinister enough that Jean-Luc Picard the amateur but well-read historian viewed him as being one of the bad guys of the past.
 
Spock in that episode did tell Kirk that if he saved Edith Keeler that millions would die who did not die before so Trek's always had this overarching philosophy of "the past was bad but if we inadvertently change it because of personal feelings it can become much worse." La'an could have killed her ancestor in his bedroom and walked away, but it could well have resulted in an Earth that was far more devastated in a coming conflict than it was in the recorded World War III. Without Khan to seize control over a quarter of the human race the eventual WWIII might have unfolded far differently and much more lethally.

Yeah. All the information La'an had indicated that killing Khan wouldn't necessarily have saved people, it would have just lead to a different (quite possibly larger) pile of bodies.
 
In better news, Wesley feels more Kirk-y! :) The little romance and Pelia were the best parts of the episode. Very strange episode, not very much happens. The nip thing made me super angry though, so I am giving it a 5.
 
killing was never Step 1 in Khan's methods. And he only became a murderer in Star Trek II after Ceti Alpha V broke him.
Um, killing was Step 2 in Khan's methods after he doesn't get what he wants in Step 1. How does that make it better?

KHAN: I should have realised that suffocating together on the Bridge would create heroic camaraderie among you. But it is quite a different thing to watch it happening to someone else. Engage the viewing screen. I'm sure you recognise your medical decompression chamber here, Doctor. And the meaning of that indicator. (It is dropping to 10Hg) Your Captain will die. If you join me, Mister Spock, I will save his life. My vessel was useless. I need you and yours to select a colony planet. One with a population willing to be led by us.
MCCOY: To be conquered by you. A starship would make that most simple, wouldn't it?
KHAN: Each of you in turn will go in there. Die while the others watch.


For that matter, most real life murderers don't usually start with murder as step 1 either. They do it after they don't get what they want in step 1.

Khan is a bad guy. Nothing justifies his actions in Space Seed.
 
I loved the little nod to DS9 with the Temporal Investigations, even if it was sad that La'an couldn't talk about everything she went through

I was disappointed that Pelia didn't show up at her door at the end.
Even if it was just to get her watch back.
Seriously though, Pelia is the one person who La'an can talk to about it all since the correcting of the Romulan interference doesn't happen till after the two of them meet.

Makes me wonder if Pelia is the one who sets up the DTI later on down the road.

My main takeaway from this episode was that the writers just wanted another reason to kill Kirk.
:shrug:

I gave it an 8.
 
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Yeah. All the information La'an had indicated that killing Khan wouldn't necessarily have saved people, it would have just lead to a different (quite possibly larger) pile of bodies.

There was a 1980s remake episode of The Twilight Zone where a time traveler seeks to save JFK from being assassinated but learns that by allowing Kennedy to live it will condemn the world to a nuclear war later in the 1960s. So this is just another variant of that "time travel f'ing up everything with the best of intentions" trope.
 
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