Dukat should have stayed in the Federation prison / mental institution. No way they would have let him escape that easily. Seriously, a BS shuttle^H^H^H^H^H^H^Hrunabout crash while being guarded by only one guy? He should have been under maximum security at all times.clearspira wrote: ↑Sun Sep 29, 2024 2:47 pmPantomime villain is correct. The obvious course of action to keep Dukat relevant would be a redemption arc whereby he dies trying to free Cardassia. I said before that this man wants power and adulation. But he also does care dearly for Cardassia - or at least, the romantic version of it inside his head. I do not believe that Dukat would have allowed the Dominion to target Cardassian cities. I also do not think that he would have been all that impressed by Weyoun giving over Cardassian territory to the Breen either.Riedquat wrote: ↑Sun Sep 29, 2024 9:56 amI don't know, turning Dukat from the franchise's most interesting villain to a pantomime villain smacks of desperation.McAvoy wrote: ↑Sun Sep 29, 2024 12:50 am I just wouldn't say they ran out of ideas just because Sisko became a Space Jesus. They were doing more with Sisko before Season 7 that involved more than Sisko just being an Emissary to the Prophets. He was starting to become a Prophet for the Prophets.
Maybe they jumped the shark with making Sisko being a Space Jesus but I just don't see it as running out of ideas. I think making Dukat the Space Devil/Anti-Christ was more about trying to keep Dukat relevant to the end the series between him and Sisko. While accidently ending his series arc in The Walz.
They had plenty of storylines. Damar's rebellion. The Breen weapon. Klingon stories. The lead up with the Pah Wraiths. The Founder illness and Section 31. All of these are plenty to work with. Maybe some don't like it, but to me it doesn't sound like they ran out of ideas.
Dukat's arc ended with "Sacrifice of Angels." I understand why the writers didn't want to do a redemption arc for him, but what they did was not better. If you had to bring Dukat back, I would have just had some shots of him having a breakdown in prison while hearing the news of what happened to Cardassia because of his actions. Or, alternatively, you could have him keep delusionally writing letters trying to convince people that actually, he was Bajor's biggest friend all along, like Robert de Niro at the end of Killers of the Flower Moon, and with no one buying any of it.
There was a literal war on. There were a thousand ways to have Jadzia die that would have made perfect sense, and would also reduce the sense of invincibility around the main characters who always get through all these harrowing situations completely unscathed. Why they decided to do the Tasha Yar thing instead is completely incomprehensible to me.I think my version of season 7 would also improve Jadzia's death who, lets be honest about this, joins Tasha Yar and Trip Tucker on the bullshit main character death scale. ''Devil Dukat teleports in and kills her in five seconds flat'' is really, really, lame. Dukat can still be the one to kill her (although that would have truly made him irredeemable in the eyes of the audience so Weyoun would have been a better choice), but after an epic firefight, maybe even on-board the ship that Ezri is on so that we can actually see the choice that she had to make between her old life and that of the next host to the Dax symbiont.