I never really thought of Georgiou this way before...but this perspective really makes the episode less vacuous. Mirror Georgiou has been letting her guard down with the Prime universe's denizens, and now that she's been thrust back into the crucible where she was formed, some of the cracks in her guard are plain to see. Certainly, more than a few of the Mirror Universe folks were not fooled that she was as ruthless as she was "the day before".Link8909 wrote: ↑Fri Dec 11, 2020 10:52 amHowever I'm glade that the Mirror Universe is still portrayed as a dark reflection of Humanity, and do make it clear that Georgiou isn't a good person, and in turn the story (so far) isn't going down the traditional redemption arc, it personally feels more like that the Federation ideals have "corrupted" her, and it's a interesting twist on the Mirror Universe stories of needing to blend in by having Georgiou who has always boasted about being Terran through and through, only for her to be constantly checking herself that "corruption" doesn't seep through.
With that said, interestingly, I think there's a few hints that her frolicking in the Prime universe actually hardened her in a few ways, and better-equipped her to be Space Hilter 40k. Beyond merely having future knowledge, I think her Section 31 experience makes her much more adept at manipulation and intelligence gathering than she was before. Taking Mirror Saru and making him an intelligence asset was a move that originally, Georgiou wouldn't have done, because she would've just tossed anyone in an agonizer booth until they told her precisely what she wants to hear.
Similarly, she's gained new weaknesses. Georgiou has really let her guard down with Mirror Burnham, which is a big mistake. Mirror Burnham isn't the stupid science-commando of the Prime universe, but a cold, calculating villainess who should never be taken lightly. Similarly, Captain Killy, while she's not quite as bright as her Prime counterpart, is someone who Georgiou should never, EVER turn her back on; Captain Killy isn't our adorkable goofball Tilly, but a hardened war-criminal who - if provoked - might just be capable of out-doing Mirror Georgiou in terms of crimes against sentient life.
I do have to agree with Mabus, though, that at least initially, the payoff being dangled in front of the audience is frankly very weak. We the audience thought that the Mirror Universe plots were jettisoned in Season 1. That the MU is brought back in Season 3, even for just a two-parter, is a distraction from the bigger and frankly better question of how precisely Discovery will figure out what caused the Burn, and reassemble the 32nd century Prime Federation. It's a distraction apropos of nothing except Michelle Yeoh possibly not getting enough screen time, or something else that's depressingly out-of-universe.
..."Depressingly out-of-universe" motivations are usually weak points in a story, but then too, Star Trek really isn't known for the strength of its writing.
One last thing: Having thought about what I saw in Part 1, I think what Part 2 will do is phaser up a plot hole from DISCO S1. In S1, the Terran Empire is a human fascist empire. In Star Trek: TOS, however, the Terran Empire is more equal-opportunity evil. I think that S3 of DISCO is going to do, is lead to that equal-opportunity evil Terran Empire, that will eventually go on to fall. I also think that Georgiou doing this, is what will cure her condition, and allow her to remain permanently in the Prime Universe; specifically, her existence depends on her fulfilling a weird and/or poorly-written casual loop.