Wouldn't that be just as impractical as lifting a helicopter off just to move a few meters?I thought, why doesn't Malloy just move the shuttle closer? Then just drag Mercer on board.
Wouldn't that be just as impractical as lifting a helicopter off just to move a few meters?
Wouldn't that be just as impractical as lifting a helicopter off just to move a few meters?
It's fun to see the effects of gravity on Solea, but it would have been nice if they worked harder to visually distinguish it. I'm sure in the hands of a human that grass is lead razorblades. But I wish they'd worked a little harder to make all the trees and such look a little more like they were surviving in super gravity instead of just letting us use imaginations that all those things are just way tougher than they look.
Also can't help but feel geographic features should be a little flatter? Buildings should maybe have more support columns?
It's a scifi show on a planet with super gravity and they made it look just like Earth so we had to use our imaginations that everything was actually way stronger and tougher, instead of using it as an opportunity to imagine the visual implications of that gravity. Seems like a waste of the genre.
Also now I'm hoping Gates McFadden and Alex Siddig somehow show up playing Soleans.
Now see, I like Bashir, but now you make me want to see DS9 with Pulaski as the medical officer. That could have been spectacular.I definitely liked that they hired a TOS alumna for the role and I did like Pulaski, though I was not happy about them kicking Crusher to the curb. I always thought that it was a shame that she never got to reprise her role in later seasons or on DS9. I always kind of envisioned DS9 as a place where fringe characters might show up, like Pulaski or Lore or the Traveler or whatever, before they turned it into a war show.
I thought, why doesn't Malloy just move the shuttle closer? Then just drag Mercer on board.
We don't really know enough about what they consider standard equipment for landing missions. It seems the regular EV suits handle most things, but Xelaya's gravity is beyond their usability. It's like having a scuba suit, but on a rare occasion you might need an atmospheric diving suit. Most ships don't carry such specialized equipment.My thoughts were more along the lines of -
They don't have a second suit?
Have we seen someone get into one of those suits without assistance?My thoughts were more along the lines of -
They don't have a second suit?
I've to see a lot of actors leave after the first season on shows I've watched. If anything I'd say it's actually one of the more common times for people to leaveI'm hoping that the loss of Alara doesn't negatively impact the show. Seems odd that the actress would make a decision to leave the series after only a dozen episodes. Even if she did break up with Seth, can't they just be professionals and get over it?
Pulaski actually has become a recurring character in the post-TV series DS9 book.I definitely liked that they hired a TOS alumna for the role and I did like Pulaski, though I was not happy about them kicking Crusher to the curb. I always thought that it was a shame that she never got to reprise her role in later seasons or on DS9. I always kind of envisioned DS9 as a place where fringe characters might show up, like Pulaski or Lore or the Traveler or whatever, before they turned it into a war show.
Trip's death still irritates the hell out of me.It was both sad and beautiful.
P.S.
Tasha's death not the worst example of character departure in Trek universe. Look at Kes, Trip Tucker or Jadzia.
Maybe not, but they could have come up with something a bit better than being bitch-slapped by a tar pit.Tasha's death not the worst example of character departure in Trek universe.
Most lives end with little to no fanfare. Unlike many of the heroes in our stories, people die alone, they're killed with barely a whimper, and it's over so quickly people don't realize it until it's done and that life has gone. Think of all the "redshirts" who died after one disruptor blast and then became free floating atoms. I think Tasha's death was, relatively speaking, more realistic.Maybe not, but they could have come up with something a bit better than being bitch-slapped by a tar pit.
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