I will say I adored how everyone treats finding a new inhabited world like kids on Christmas morning.
It should be like that. Never really was on Trek.
It's like TNG with the arrogance and loftiness filed off.
I will say I adored how everyone treats finding a new inhabited world like kids on Christmas morning.
It should be like that. Never really was on Trek.
The whole premise that people born under an astrological sign are branded criminals and imprisoned really falls apart when you think about it. Is there otherwise no crime on this planet?
Yes. I kept thinking that throughout the episode. I also wondered about what if our sun and/or the Moclan sun was actually part of that constellation...It amazes me that no one thought to point out that Kelly and Bortas were born on different planets and that therefore different constellations would have been in the sky at the time. Oh well.
That would be nice. I also might have Garrett Wang play an ensign...Introduced by another admiral here. I wonder if they would cast Kelsey Grammer as one.
Yeah, it was nice scene.I will say I adored how everyone treats finding a new inhabited world like kids on Christmas morning.
It should be like that. Never really was on Trek.
Agreed. Starfleet would've done a major investigation of a species prior to contacting them (and they wouldn't bother a non-warp capable species or alternatively, would've explored under deep cover) so if they found out that planet is run by a bunch of Nazis who committed genocide, I think they would've stayed the hell away from it.The Union has more relaxed first contact rules than the Federation it seems.
Yeah, and when Ed reaches for that he sounds fatuous - as, for that matter, the Trek characters do.It's like TNG with the arrogance and loftiness filed off.
I know many folks here like Orville because there's no real equivalent of PD in the Orville-verse, but Starfleet has good reasons to put it out there....
Speaking of not well-handled, Ed's meeting with the planetary leader made it pretty clear why he and his crew aren't considered the best of the best. One wonders whether Picard might have been more successful.
Of course, the other captains probably would have just located Kelly and Bortas and extracted them (and I'm not quite clear as to why that wasn't considered a serious option since everyone already knew they were from outer space).
Picard, Sisko, and Janeway would've sent a fully armed rescue team to extract Kelly and Bortus, or alternatively they would've located and transported them back to the ship, as having a transporter/teleport is one advantage the Trek-verse have over the Orville-verse -
Picard, Sisko, and Janeway would've sent a fully armed rescue team to extract Kelly and Bortus, or alternatively they would've located and transported them back to the ship, as having a transporter/teleport is one advantage the Trek-verse have over the Orville-verse - where PU doesn't use the teleport even though they know (from their encounter with the Kelly planet people in 'Mad Idolatry' that technology does exist,
Here's the thing - I grant The Orville really preposterous story premises at the outset of episodes - partly because I've comfortably done the same thing for fifty years with Star Trek, and this show is so much more entertaining most weeks than Trek is.
But that "entertaining" bit - that's the main bit. Most weeks, Orville manages by the climax to do something with the premise that just tickles the hell out of me. My weekly experience has been rather dependably something along the lines of:
Okay, something like that, approximately. More or less.
- Five minutes in: Well, that's kinda unlikely, but novel;
- 20 minutes in: I dunno where they're going with this one. Not quite buying it; and
- 40 minutes in: <Smiling and clapping>
This one reached stage 2, and then fell flat. Astrology as the intellectual basis of a scientific culture is probably a bridge too far, for lots of reasons, but as I alluded to earlier if the show turns out to be primarily about something more interesting than the jumping-off point - as it usually does - I'm okay with it. This time, it didn't.
The whole story eventually devolved this time into only a standard procedural shoot-out and cocked weapon pointed at the heroes. And then a civilization based in the most rigid kind of false belief upended itself immediately (fast enough to save two people from imminent execution) by responding rationally to a new piece of information. That's weak tea.
Although, on Voyager they did something similar. In False Profits, Ferengi stranded in the Delta Quadrant manipulate a culture's religion to make themselves look like gods spoken of in a prophecy. So, the Voyager crew detonate photon torpedoes in orbit as a means of creating conditions spoken of in the same prophecy to represent the departure of these gods as pretense to get the Ferengi beamed out.Plus The Prime Directive would've prevented them from doing any major intervention like creating the new star they did.
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