PKTrekGirl said:
DarthTom said:
JiNX-01 said:
Seems to me quite a few people in Trek ignore the rules at various times. Of course, if everybody on Star Trek was perfectly perfect who'd watch?
One of the reasons I like TNG least now is Picard was the 'captain remake' after Kirk to be the super clean boyscout which is as you say, no fun.
Morally tenuous characters are more real and more like able because they are flawed like all of us are in reality.
My feelings exactly. And it's not just Picard. It's pretty much that entire crew. I'm bored with the happy shiny crew crap...and I'm bored with the smug superiority.
I liked Sisko for the same reasons I liked Kirk. He was not afraid of a fight...and occasionally, it *was* at least in small part personal. Mostly, his mission was to defend the Federation and Bajor...and he was pretty single minded about that. But on a couple of occasions he illustrated clearly that he was not above bending the rules in order to carry out that mission - particularly in
In the Pale Moonlight, where he participated in a plot to bring the Romulans into the war when defeat for the Federation looked imminent otherwise....and in
For the Uniform, where he went to great lengths to capture a treasonous crew member who had betrayed his uniform (Eddington) by poisoning the atmosphere of a Maquis planet.
Janeway could have been like this. But due to crappy writing, she made some really questionable decisions - mostly during the last couple of seasons of the show when the writers of VOY had given up any pretense of caring about the character of Janeway. The most obvious is in
Endgame, where she blows off the Temporal Prime Directive and potentially changes the lives of millions, NOT for the Federation's greater good...but just so a couple of her 'friends' could be 'happy'. And one other really obvious one is is at the end of
Flesh & Blood, where the right thing to do to protect the entire crew of Voyager would have been to hit CTRL-ALT-DEL on the EMH. The guy committed treason and had a LONG and colorful history by that time of being more concerned with himself than with his duties. Letting him off over and over...and especially at this juncture...put the entire crew at risk. And it would have been easy to simply reboot him.
For my own part, I LOVE when characters bend the rules. But the writing in these situations is critical. The motivation is critical. The bending should be for the greater good. But even more importantly, it should be
consistent with the character's core beliefs. I cannot emphasize this last bit enough.
I think the biggest beef with
Endgame was that, after 7 years of running all over the dangerous DQ while defending and fiercely clinging to Federation principles...Janeway completely ABANDONS one of the most MASSIVE of those principles - the TPD - just to make a couple of dead friends happy. This was NOT consistent with her core beliefs, as illustrated numerous times throughout the series.
That is why people like me are still annoyed about this episode. And that is why we maintain that it ruined Janeway.