I thought that was just hundreds of years of evolution from the original idea. They've reinvented it many times as they assimilated new technology. The same design influence remains, but not the exact same designs.The suit the scavenger was wearing looked like it was modified from a different suit design than the one in that photo. Probably just no communication between the art and costume department
On one level, I'm finding it odd how horror-focused this season is, and wish for slightly more varied tones given the limited episode count.It's interesting because when they were saying even the Gorn thought of the scavengers as monsters, I was thinking to myself, "What is it with this season, anyway? Just last week, we had the pseudo-Pah-wraiths, and now this?" It wouldn't have nuked my enjoyment of this episode, but it was still gnawing at me. Like, is this the season of monsters right now?
I suppose the scavengers being human doesn't change that. If anything, that accentuates it all. But. Importantly. It contextualizes them, and lends gravitas, in a savvy way. It separates them from the other "monstrous" entities that the U.S.S. Enterprise has been encountering lately. That's good.
On the other, this is why I have such weird love for season 2 of TNG - space felt so scary and weird and vast and inexplicable in (many of) those episodes, more than any other season of Star Trek, until this one.
It's nice to again feel this kind of mysterious and weird space menace. Sometimes, you just run into a Nagilum in a scary void, and there isn't much of an explanation for how this horror came to be.
I thought the scavenger ship was destroyed because it detonated the warp core of the Klingon ship inside it, and blowing that ship was a shot you could only make with torpedoes, when the mouth happened to be open.Yeah, I think the scavenger ship should have survived and fled. I think that would have been better than destroying it with a couple torpedoes. It was too easy. In fact, I almost chuckled a bit when they destroyed the scavenger ship so easily with torpedoes. Why did they not think of that sooner when they first noticed the phasers were not doing anything?
I always need more Sam Kirk, but especially here. The chance to explore that relationship is the only thing I liked about the idea of having James Kirk on the show, and they've barely done a thing with it.It might have made sense to have included Sam Kirk here, though I'd prefer he stay onboard the Enterprise. But it's as close to perfect as SNW has accomplished to date, and clearly in the top five of the show as a whole.
I just have to say I'm always relieved to see someone else who also doesn't like Wesley. I hate the performance so much, and I feel like a real outlier with that!I really don't like Paul Wesley's portrayal as Kirk. Compared to Anson he's a charisma hole. This episode did not make me yearn for a "Year one" series. SNW works best as it's own show, NOT when it tries to launch a TOS reboot