CharlesPhipps wrote: ↑Thu Nov 02, 2023 8:42 pm
Making Benny Russell real and a fantasy writer has a lot of weird implications. It means he made a wildly successful children's book that people are still reading centuries later but it means he never got to do DS9 or continue in pulp sci-fi. Which is a weird bit of continuity derived from an Easter Egg but actually has a lot of depressing implications.
I agree.
This is one of those "references" that feels like a reference for reference's sake (or an Easter Egg, if you prefer), instead of something that would happen in a genuine consistent world. Is it entirely inconceivable? Certainly not, but it's a sufficiently large stretch that for me it broke the suspension of disbelief. That was a "oh, these people want me to know they remember Benny Russel is a Trek Character who was an Author" moment. It doesn't have the ring of truth to it, for me.
It also doesn't help that because it's a fictional story that we only get a tiny glimpse of, the episode overall fails to really get me to connect with the story. I don't know it, and I don't feel like I do still by the end. It was a collection of broad stereotypes and random characterizations and no real meaningful allegory to any of them (which is reasonable to expect from a fictional fairytale used to anchor a "what if" type of episode).
This doesn't seem like the kind of story that Benny Russel would write, because of the genre, the format, and the lack of an apparent personal connection.
CrypticMirror wrote: ↑Sun Nov 05, 2023 4:30 pm
Mabus wrote: ↑Mon Oct 30, 2023 8:13 pm
I find it amusing that M'Benga's daughter arc lasted barely 3 episodes, with her only appearing on screen for like 10 minutes, I think. Yet another example of "the writers didn't think this through", which is typical of NuTrek.
I agree that they often don't things through, but in this case they avoided nuTrek's cardinal sin of dragging everything out for far too long. M'Benga's daughter stuck around long enough to be relevant to specific episodes, but did not overstay her welcome in an overdone and drawn out angst drenched season long dominating plot. Discovery could have taken notes.
It's better than that alternative, sure, but it felt really abrupt and unsatisfying to me. I thought this was an intriguing major character subplot, but it ended up feeling like it mattered as much as getting over a bad haircut. "A wizard did it" is not a great way to solve the problem, and an episode that feels like such a dud overall means that the journey as well as the destination falls flat.
It's even weirder now that Season 2 has seemingly re-rolled the dice on the Doc's character and shuffled him around some more. It's entirely disconnected from the Season 1 tone, and her absence is part of that.