But it wouldn't be a dream: Benny Russell lived in the universe that was in his imagination, the future was the character whom he created.The Benny Russell ending was an idiotic idea, it was completely illogical and would have made no sense. "It was all just a dream" is a tired trope for an ending and almost never works.
Some of my favorite Star Trek episodes involved a trip into a different situation than usual:
City on the Edge of Forever, Assignment: Earth, Mirror Mirror, Things Past, Past Tense, and, yes, Far Beyond the Stars. I wouldn't want every episode to be a time/dimension travel episode unrelated to the main events of their series, or it would be more Twilight Zone than Star Trek. But I'm happy with the occassional change of pace. Star Trek has always told parables about our own time, and that's one way to do them.
This would have been a bold move, but I probably would have hated it.Ira Behr has mentioned his original intent for having DS9 end with Benny Russell walking out of the Paramount lot. It would have been interesting, but the fans would have hated it. Star Trek is a dream though, so maybe some might have liked it...
https://trekmovie.com/2018/08/21/ir...deep-space-nine-to-end-more-ds9-at-stlv-2018/
While I think that "Far Beyond the Stars" is hands down the best DS9 episode, it would have been a mistake to go full Tommy Westphall and have the entire series be a creation of Benny's imagination.
The Prophets move in mysterious ways, and it is enough that there strictly might have been a person both who perceived the future and who also might have had creative power over it by his imagination.
But those aren't the only possibilities. Perhaps the visions of Benny that Sisko had only constituted an exploration of non-literal truths, but nevertheless undeniable truths about human nature. An unambiguous statement of their literal truth could easily have undermined the significance of the visions as parables.
Boxing things in by going full Tommy Westphall could also easily have had negative consequences for the other parts of the franchise.
Finally, "Shadows and Symbols" was decidedly inferior to "Far Beyond the Stars," which supports the idea that they probably should have left well enough alone.
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