blahface wrote: ↑2022-05-05 10:28pm
You'd think that when Seven finally encounter Q again she would have asked about his son.
Like Robert Picard, Q Jr seems to have... disappeared. Apparently even the Q are not immune to the whims of the writers.
bilateralrope wrote:With the detail of Weasley using what looks like a typical transporter, instead of the fog-transporter effect. So that's one more question I have about them.
Maybe he was booted out, and is now pretending? Even the Travellers must have their limits when it comes to Wesley Crusher.
bilateralrope wrote:Yeah. I'm not buying that the trauma went unresolved for so long. I doubt his mothers suicide went unrecorded by the authorities* and something like that should have come up in whatever psychological evaluation the academy performs on cadets. Then there are his decades in Starfleet encountering various telepaths. Including Troi.
*Though they might not have discovered that he let her out.
Or that time when Picard and Dr Crusher literally had devices telepathically linking them together and were discussing Picard's love for her, yet his mother was never brought up.
Or never brought up even when Picard and Robert were at fisticuffs and discussing their childhood.
Or that time an apparition of his
clearly elderly mother appeared in "Where No One Has Gone Before" and at no point did Picard say "Gotcha! My
real mom hung herself long before she'd become a nanny!"
IMO if there were going to do a time travel story involving a past trauma which stunted Picard's love life, why not finally show the Stargazer mission which lead to Jack Crusher's death (which IIRC was explored in novels but not in detail in the tv series proper)? And elderly Picard has to choose once again whether or not to let his best friend die? And end with him finally forgiving himself for Jack's death and openly pursuing a relationship with Beverly?
Or, as a time travel story about Q and the Borg, why not have Q bring Picard to a time-line where he did
not end up sending the E-D to J25 to encounter the Borg and see where things played out from there? With Picard ultimately deciding that, despite all the death and destruction that the original course of events lead to, they were still better than the alternative? And finally let go of his guilt over being Locutus?
I mean, there's a lot of options they could have explored here.
Crazedwraith wrote:The lack of explicit WWIII reference really pissed me off. Elephant in the room unaddressed.
There's enough elephants in the room that Jurati could've just used them block to explosion instead of the fleet
Crazedwraith wrote:
Khan and the Eugenics War was 1990s unless they've retconned it. It's more likely a reference to Enterprise's Arik Soong who created/rescued Augments. I forget the precise details.
True, I forgot about that.
EnterpriseSovereign wrote:Seven Of Nine's sexuality changing from straight to bisexual (anyone remember her relationship with Chakotay?) was less than convincing- I don't recall her showing any sign of attraction to any other women and she had her share of male admirers on Voyager.
Given Seven's options between Commander Poorly-Researched-And-Walking-Native-Stereotype Chakotay, Chronically-Sexually Confused/Abused Ensign Kim, Perverted Holo Doctor who
really ought to follow medical ethics when it comes to patients, Boring Dream Borg Boyfriend Living on Other Side of the Galaxy, Stupid Angry Nazi Husband From Alternate Timeline or Raffi... tbh I think this is the best match she's made so far!
bilateralrope wrote: They were all preparing to live in the past until Q offered them a way back to their time. A way he said would kill him. Even if Q was lying about that, convincing him to bring along two extra people seems unlikely.
EnterpriseSovereign wrote:Is that what Q meant? I didn't pick that up, though I'm sure the writers could still have made that work
Ya the writers could have easily made it work. In the story, Q makes it clear that he only had enough energy to send the crew back, and Rios deciding to stay left enough surplus to bring Elnor back. Q also states that in his weakened state this act would "kill" him... or at least end his existence in this particular universe and send his consciousness off somewhere (it's possible that what he was hinting at when he insisted on saying he was "moving on" instead of "dying", unless he was just being in denial). Q admits he doesn't know what will actually happen when he "dies," which is why he was initially hoping to enjoy the experience (much like Quinn).
EnterpriseSovereign wrote:
It was very rushed the way they suddenly returned to the future and how they immediately went do deal with a discharge from some anomaly they just discovered and how it threatened the quadrant/sector, which was about as plausible as the Hobus supernova somehow posing a similar threat. It wouldn't surprise me if said anomaly was something the Borg themselves inadvertently caused, perhaps a trying to set up another transwarp hub and it blowing up in their faces.
Ya, kinda silly how they solved that problem (well, the explosion, not the conduit itself) so quickly.
Also, you'd think that Jurati would have maybe just revealed herself right away before shooting tentacles everywhere to take over the ships? Or arrived a bit sooner so that she could fully explain herself?
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