I think this one is better than the last one, but that's a very low bar to clear. The animation is done well in TAS style. This episode is like a Saturday Night Live skit that falls flat. Not innovative, just tepid. I've now learned to temper my expectations for the rest of the Very Short Treks.
I'm hoping Very Short Treks started with their weakest showing. Who okayed this? I'm imagining someone who when asked what their favorite part of Star Trek is, responds, "the lightsabers and the Wookies." How else would the not at all representative of Star Trek whinge, "omg, I can't say anything without offending someone!," get put on repeat for nearly the entirety of the short. Except by someone who is clueless about Star Trek. And then ending with the Captain getting his imaginary girlfriend wish fulfilled. What the hell did I just write. What the hell did I just watch.
I just watched it. It was a nice bit of Star Trek-ness. I was shouting out answers to Jackie Cox' questions to passerbys. And, now I want an outfit like Jackie Cox wore -- sequins and Star Trek.
I call my cats by pet names of, sweetie, bunny (I have no idea why I call cats bunnies), love. I also call them by the pet names of bogan, hooligan, and ruffian. "Which one of you hooligans did this?" is an often used phrase in my home. My cats are very good at looking innocent when they are guilty; and looking guilty when they've done nothing wrong. They drive me crazy. I love them with all my being.
When I last had a dog (I still love and miss you, Ali) he would eat whatever I wrapped his pill in and spit out the pill. I had to put the pill in his mouth, gently hold his snoot close, and massage his throat until he swallowed the pill. Cats I've lived with? I tried to give a pill to one of my cats. The cat became a whirlwind of anger, fury, and indignation. I think they bent time-space and opened a wormhole. I wound up taking them to the vet, and having a vet tech give my cat the pill.
I'm glad this scene was omitted. I think that it starts as a "beautiful little moment," but then it just goes off the rails. I thought it would be about Worf reconciling his Earth upbringing with his Klingon heritage, finding a balance that suited him, or something along that line. Nope. Using killing a random woman (or anyone) as a plot point. Always tiresome, and very not Worf.
I like LD, all the seasons. I think season 3 is where the main characters take steps towards their future growth, beyond being ensigns. I think that Mariner has the biggest character growth and change. The season 3 finale, "The Stars at Night," is pretty intense for LD, but I think it is so very well done.
On the petty side, I hope that Mariner does not get back with Jennifer in season 4. She ignored Jennifer at the end of the season 3 finale, so here's hoping.
"We have always believed that The Wrath of Khan is the fulcrum movie upon which Star Trek turned."
I think that this cannot be overstated. TMP did not get the reception, recognition, and bucket loads of money, the studio was banking on. It no doubt took a lot of work, and luck, to get the studio to back a second Star Trek film, even with its much lower budget. There are many reasons we have the current choices of Star Trek series and movies, but I don't underestimate how vital TWoK's success is with the situation. This sounds like a fascinating book, and is definitely on my "I want" list.
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Random lukewarm takes with no consistency of posting? Want it? That's exactly what I'll be doing on my Mastodon account! Occasionally sharing some of my tepid observations with the world.
I like this moment. No villainous riffing. No sneering. No glaring. Just a casual greeting. So surreal.
Doing what it takes to save Tendi!
No worries. You regularly comment and post on a variety of topics, always with a steady and non-antagonistic viewpoint. This situation is very, "it's not you, it's me." I have relatives from the southern U.S., and they shorten "passed away" to just "passed." It's just what I'm used to hearing.
I love this scene! I think they all nailed it. Wilson Cruz' delivery, posture, head tilt, everything for, "Did you just call me 'Papi?' " is wonderful. I'm loving the Georgiou quotes, too.
"Well hellooo!"
Nice! Before I remembered where it's from, my first thought was it must be from Lower Decks. Nope.
Yes! I think taken on its own, it comes across as a not-epic quote. But, as the finish to a tremendous demonstration by two amazingly talented actors, it's so emotionally hard-hitting.
Excellent. Love that episode.
I don't hate the Borg Queen. I think she's an awesome antagonist. All hail the (Borg) Queen Alice Krige. Mad respect for Susanna Thompson's portrayal. Loved Annie Wersching's Borg Queen, too. Jane Edwina Seymour's Borg Queen creeped me out, which was the goal, so kudos to her.
Yeah it did. LOL!