In less deft hands, this script could have easily just been a farce - like the odious Profit and Lace from Deep Space Nine - or a meh snoozer like You Are Cordially Invited.
Fortunately, this episode is actually trying to do a great deal more than simply being a lighthearted Trek comedy involving a "body swap" of sorts and a wedding. It largely dispenses with the fish-out-of-water comedy aspects in its third act, pivoting to real emotional turmoil for Spock, Chapel, T'Pring, and Amanda. It touches on deep and universal aspects of relationships, both familial and romantic. It succeeds, astonishingly, at both being one of the better Trek comedies and being a decent character study.
I have a hard time thinking of anything wrong with this episode. The choice to have the noncorporeal aliens talk like customer service representatives was...a choice...but it helped add levity to an episode where first contact was not the driving force. I thought the charades scene itself was a bit painful to watch, but that's more because of my own personal bias against "cringe comedy" - the scene was effective at getting me to feel vicarious embarrassment, so it worked.
I swear, if they sell that beanie for a reasonable price, they'd make a killing off of simple merchandising.So I assume they will be selling standard regulation beanies now?
From what I can tell, Pon Farr is a biological Mechanism that Vulcans can a irresistable desire to mate every 7 years.I think they're getting rid of Pon Farr too
That's my assumption. It's the future, Humans have gotten great at health and aging.
You have to remember, that Vulcans live longer than humans, on average Vulcans have been recorded to live up ≥ 220 Human Years.I didn't care necessarily for how human Spock acted though. They described it like he was a teenager, and I don't see why he would necessarily act like a teenager. He's an adult, and I could see him struggling with unrestrained emotions, but not acting like a teen. I suppose that was done for comedic effect, but it didn't make much sense to me. Further, the scene where Uhura, La'an, Una, and Ortegas are teaching Spock to be Vulcan is another scene, which worked as comedy I suppose, but didn't make much sense either. Spock has been half-human all along, and learned to integrate his feelings, and he has been culturally Vulcan since birth, so he wouldn't need them teaching him how to be Vulcan.
Like I said to someone else, she's been trying, she's been working at better understanding, she's demonstrated her love for him and he still doesn't trust her. She was hurt. And I imagine you've been unforgiving in similar circumstances. (Or I'm giving you the benefit of the doubt.)This is what's wrong with their relationship. T'Pring cut her teeth on her mother and is replicating her devouring behavior. T'Pring cannot forgive a teeny fault like this.
I probably should not engage, but sometimes the things you say are so deeply wrong and so easily dismissed by actual statistics that I'm shocked. I don't think anyone could argue that women (being human and all) aren't capable of evil. But I will argue that they get away with it more than men because they're more manipulative or some bullshit.Why is that women are always forgiven for their pathological behavior?
Totally. I don't think it's the last we'll see of her though. Her story isn't over (as we know).I'm sad this episode seemed to wrap up that arc and this whole thing with Spock and Chapel I guess was supposed to happen but to do it at T'Pring's expense kind of rubs me the wrong way.
Michelle Yeoh turned 60 this year right?There are women in their early 60s who actually look pretty much like her...
I was distracted for a minute when her first scene with Spock was about to start, and when I looked back and saw this young woman talking to Spock about the event my first thought was she must be some sort of party planner.Something not well-addressed in Trek, but it is realistic to expect that by the mid 23rd Century, human lifespans should be about half-again as long as they are now, with the associated extended youth and vitality. Then again, WWIII would have had a detrimental effect on the species as well, so who knows.
In any case, Mia Kirschner looks too damn young as Amanda here- more like Spock's sister than his mom. I'm almost in favor of giving her some gray or silver highlights in her hair just to lend her a bit of gravitas in terms of her supposed age.
Maybe gradual human lifespan engineering has been in the works and the "Methusalah" project where every human gets a little bit of a longer life is starting to set in by this point.In any case, Mia Kirschner looks too damn young as Amanda here- more like Spock's sister than his mom. I'm almost in favor of giving her some gray or silver highlights in her hair just to lend her a bit of gravitas in terms of her supposed age.
That gradual growing "Rage" at Sam's messiness at the conference table was hilarious.Spock being held back by two officers as he threatens to break Kirk;
Well, that was a joy to watch.
Lots of funny moments throughout, with my highlight being his friends trying to teach him to act like a Vulcan.
I think comedy really endears the characters to me.
The show runners just need to concede the point that this is a slightly altered timeline, and run with it.
Like I said to someone else, she's been trying, she's been working at better understanding, she's demonstrated her love for him and he still doesn't trust her. She was hurt. And I imagine you've been unforgiving in similar circumstances. (Or I'm giving you the benefit of the doubt.)
Something I forgot to mention in my review was this was the Ortegas I wanted last week for the Ortegas episode. She was fun here, didn't seem to have attitude issues, and she still flew the shuttle (I'm Erica Ortegas, and I fly the Ship!!!) in the end. That scene when they were teaching Spock how to be a Vulcan was hilarious.
Maaaybe. Spock literally wasn't himself (as in half his DNA was altered) when he made the decision and it's unfair for T'Pring to blame him for something he did when he wasn't himself. It'd be like Spock blaming T'Pring for something she did after her juice was spiked with Romulan ale.Agree, and would add that when you’ve just had a major shock in a close relationship, going straight from receiving that shock to expressing forgiveness is unrealistic. It takes a lot of mental and emotional readjustment to move from your perceived reality to revealed reality. Some time is required for that process, and taking that time doesn’t mean that person is unforgiving.
That's what I've been saying all along.
Here's the 3x Time-Line Theory postulated by Anti-Trekker AKA Salty-Trekker.
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Having 3x Time-Line solves ALOT of issues and explains away any inconsistencies due to time-travel.
It doesn't invalidate the old time-line either, what we're watching is just a slightly modified parallel world due to time-travel shenanigans done by previous shows.
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