Deledrius wrote: ↑Sun Oct 23, 2022 10:33 pm
Madner Kami wrote: ↑Sun Oct 23, 2022 8:25 pm
I feel that would be the wrong takeaway or resolution.
[...]
I dispute this, because this show has displayed a consistant incapability of making the characters accountable for their actions and, especially and in particular, failings.
I think perhaps you misread that second point, because I'm agreeing with you there. At least, in the point where I expect the status quo to be restored soon, it will negate everything this episode did well. I mentioned that mostly in the context of how that's not what happens in real life in such a situation, but it does undermine the episode. But we haven't seen it yet, so it's impossible to know for sure what direction they'll take it.
It's a comedy where they want to have their cake and eat it, so I'm not expecting better than we've gotten.
My apologies then, I'm in a wierd mood today, which may mislead me into reading something that wasn't written. I understood "status quo restored" as "Mariner being back on board without any takeaway".
CharlesPhipps wrote: ↑Sun Oct 23, 2022 10:50 pm
Madner Kami wrote: ↑Sun Oct 23, 2022 8:25 pmIt certainly is, but it's a price you paid for your past actions. Mind you, I am not judging you or anything, but the people's past experience with you informed their current actions in that situation. It's basically your past self hurting you specifically, instead of others (as your past self seems to have done).
That's one way of looking at it. Another is that the people turn out to be aggressively ignorant and not bothering to gather the facts before making snap decisions as a group. It's doubly problematic because they are on a ship and have to be kept in such a tight confines. Captain Freeman is doubly responsible because she presumably is getting reports from Ransom who has been getting nothing but praise about her himself.
Why bother giving her a second chance (or third or fourth) if you're going to ignore doing so.
That part was specifically aimed at Deledrius' experience, not so much at Lower Decks. But putting it into the framework of Lower Decks, I would expect people to suspect her being the "traitor" outright, but this is decidely not a reaction I expect from Starfleet-officers, much less her own mother and especially not from a myriad of characters who weren't exactly a victim of her past actions. I mean, Shax? How often was he actually hurt by Mariner's actions? Or the doctor? It just feels very out of nowhere, undeserved and nonsensical, that the entire crew turns against Mariner, including her girl-friend.
CharlesPhipps wrote: ↑Sun Oct 23, 2022 10:50 pmIt's a bit weird you do so when the entire point of this episode was that Mariner changed dramatically both in her relationship to the ship, its crew, her mother, and herself. This is also not a third season development as the changes to Mariner's character started in "Crisis Point."
I wouldn't call her changes dramatic. I see the changes the character underwent, but the character to me feels very flip-flopping and this latest episode shows this so blatantly, that it hurts. She gets blamed for something she didn't do and instead of just dealing with it, she throws everything away and runs off with a person that is very much Mariner's equal in all the bad ways, reverting back to where she started. I somehow doubt that this is what Deledrius did in that same situation.
At the same time, the show tends to be crass for comedic value, perfectly on display with Mariner being thrown off the ship and stationed in Bumfucknowhere with Tweedldee and Tweedldumb, so I probably shouldn't read too much into it, but this is just another sign to me, why this show frustrates me so much. It's inconsistent and can't find the proper balance between serious and comedic. It feels like later seasons Simpsons, while it clearly tries to be early seasons Simpsons, for lack of a better word.
CharlesPhipps wrote: ↑Sun Oct 23, 2022 10:50 pmThat seems a bit like, "Other than that, how was the play, Mrs. Lincoln?"
The meaning of this is lost on me.
CharlesPhipps wrote: ↑Sun Oct 23, 2022 10:50 pmShe's achieved remarkable growth as a person, though, and stopped caring about impressing people or being an edgy rebel.
She has? So this is why she ran off with the edgy rebel, thief and traitor, who is very much a spitting image of Mariner herself. Yeah, that makes total sense... Sorry, I don't buy it. I mean, I'm certain they'll use this as an opportunity to show Mariner how bad her own behaviour is or was, but what does anyone get from seeing that, which we haven't see before already? Sending her on a redemption-arc-rebound from her aborted redemption-arc? Blegh.
CharlesPhipps wrote: ↑Sun Oct 23, 2022 10:50 pmHe's an Ensign on a Starfleet vessel. One of the most prestigious positions in the galaxy. He has, however, gone from being a rules abiding suck up to being BOLD BOIMLER as well as having the makings of being a proper author.
He was all that when we met him in the first episode already. Let me remind you, that he stood up to Mariner, when he believed she was doing nefarious stuff in the very first episode. His stay on the Titan was before the "BOLD BOIMLER!"-persona, if I recall right and he was both respected, well-liked and rewarded for his actions, until the universe decided to shit on him again and making him the butt-monkey.
Also, he consistently displayed a great deal of competence and understanding of his fellow crew-members, so "rules-abiding suck up" is very misleading, though he does indeed get shown to have these traits. However, remember how he's the only one who can deal with the stresses during "Temporal Eddict"? Everyone just crumbles, but he thrives, somehow. And he is also the one person who convinces Freeman of the necessity of buffer-time for everyone else, despite buffer time being very anathema to him personally. Boimler shows an extreme degree of competency (repeatedly) and understanding of everyone around him over and over again, making him probably the only one on the entire ship who should sit in a command chair. But there we are again, at the show's tonal inconsistency. Boimler certainly needed some tempering, but he recieves dismissal and is constantly the target of most of the degrading jokes of the show.
CharlesPhipps wrote: ↑Sun Oct 23, 2022 10:50 pmYeah, Freeman has not grown as a person and as a woman in her middle years, I wouldn't expect her too.
But she must, if the show ever wants to get somewhere. Otherwise she's the eternal reset-button for Mariner in a show that seems to try to have consistent character-development.
CharlesPhipps wrote: ↑Sun Oct 23, 2022 10:50 pmIt's strange because I think Boimler and Mariner have both changed considerably.
I just do not see how. "BOLD BOIMLER" is still Boimler trying to be someone he's not for the sake of being accepted, recognized and cheered for, rather than just going his way and being who he is. Well, the universe makes him the center of a joke less often than it used to, so there's that. Mariner? At times, yes, but then she bursts out into a rant a scene later and takes matters into her own hands because she knows better than everyone else. And now she throws everything that stuck regardless away and ran off. I dunno, the show feels just so inconsistent, both trying to keep things in stasis for the sake of a joke and trying to develop things at the same time. It just doesn't know what it wants to be, whether it wants to be a comedic drama or a pure comedy.
I'm not certain I can find the right words to describe how I feel about the overall show, other than the ones above.
"If you get shot up by an A6M Reisen and your plane splits into pieces - does that mean it's divided by Zero?
- xoxSAUERKRAUTxox