The man had an amazing career. I just miss him.We really missed a chance with Harry Morgan, didn't we?![]()
The man had an amazing career. I just miss him.We really missed a chance with Harry Morgan, didn't we?![]()
That's what he just said.
Don't worry about it. Just doing my [self-appointed] job.I was more responding to the post *he* was quoting and didn't catch the double quite in there.![]()
The man had an amazing career. I just miss him.
How do you build tension when you know the ship can't be destroyed?And how do you "build tension" when the hero ship is the most powerful? Doesn't the tension come from our heroes being in danger?
They can, and sometimes do. Sure, they're usually safe, but they're not invincible in-story.How do you build tension when you know the ship can't be destroyed?
And that something like 40% of the hero's can't die?
How do you build tension when you know the ship can't be destroyed?
And that something like 40% of the hero's can't die?
You must've hated Star Trek syndication reruns. Never re-watched an episode I take it? I mean you KNOW the ship and crew are going to survive.How do you build tension when you know the ship can't be destroyed?
And that something like 40% of the hero's can't die?
Is this a serious question?How do you build tension when you know the ship can't be destroyed?
And that something like 40% of the hero's can't die?
Maybe “can’t die” is something the ship’s computer tracks?They can, and sometimes do. Sure, they're usually safe, but they're not invincible in-story.
Also, it's "heroes".
Because there's more to stakes than death.How do you build tension when you know the ship can't be destroyed?
And that something like 40% of the hero's can't die?
I don't think they disabled it, just forced to reposition itself. It was right back on the Enterprise's tail moments later.It WAS weird that they hyped up that alien ship as super duper powerful, and yet they only needed a single phaser shot to disable it for a while.
It felt to me like the alien ship was very powerful, but also larger, bulkier, and slower than the E. So our heroes were able to out-maneuver the enemy and land a precision shot. Admittedly it was a stretch, but still well within the norm for Trek.It WAS weird that they hyped up that alien ship as super duper powerful, and yet they only needed a single phaser shot to disable it for a while. Ah, classic Trek.
I don't think they disabled it, just forced to reposition itself. It was right back on the Enterprise's tail moments later.
I think you need to re-watch that sequence. They didn't disable the ship, they just disabled one of its weapons platforms. They were attempting to lessen its firepower so their Shields would hold until Spock was able to do his thing with the shuttlecraft.It WAS weird that they hyped up that alien ship as super duper powerful, and yet they only needed a single phaser shot to disable it for a while. Ah, classic Trek.
IMO the episode wouldn't have lost anything by making the shown ship equal or less powerful than the big-E. Even a weaker enemy can give tons of damage, and then it's a classic "risking your own life" vs. a whole planet dilemma. But whatever - the way it was was perfectly fine.
Warp it. Warp it real good!This is actually one thing I really don't like about modern Trek, SNW included – that apparently every captain needs to have their own catchphrase for going to warp![]()
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