Inside the ‘Star Trek: Discovery’ Series Finale: The Last-Minute Coda, the Surprise Easter Eggs, and What Season 6 Would Have Been About (EXCLUSIVE) (variety.com)
from ValueSubtracted@startrek.website to startrek@startrek.website on 31 May 2024 00:54
https://startrek.website/post/10882500

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pelletbucket@lemm.ee on 31 May 2024 03:15 next collapse

coda? is that a reference to the Star Trek Coda book series?

ValueSubtracted@startrek.website on 31 May 2024 03:20 next collapse

Nope - after they were cancelled, they were allowed to go back and film some additional scenes to add to the end of the finale to give it some closure.

singpolyma@lemmy.ml on 31 May 11:57 collapse

I really found the coda/epilogue to be distracting. The end of the main story ended in a good place, with Burnham and Booker heading off on their next adventure. And then suddenly we’re getting this long drawn-out “and then later after many adventures they… did something useless we can’t explain but at least they saw their old friends again the end” just really took the wind out of it.

ValueSubtracted@startrek.website on 31 May 12:42 next collapse

I wouldn’t say I found it distracting, if only because I knew it was coming, but I can definitely see the argument that it wasn’ t necessary.

pelletbucket@lemm.ee on 31 May 18:28 next collapse

I have to tell myself that Star Trek Picard is a Star Trek novel. for some reason my brain lets them get away with a lot more if I have that aspect

usernamefactory@lemmy.ca on 01 Jun 05:57 collapse

I agree completely. The planet Michael and Book settled on was beautiful, the makeup was well done, the new uniforms were nifty, but what was the point of it all? That one day Michael will be old and nostalgic? I didn’t need to be told that. And I definitely didn’t need the half hearted Calypso tie-in. It was just disturbing watching Michael smilingly order a sentient intelligence to suffer a thousand years of loneliness for no reason that we or she knows.

The wedding and beach scenes were lovely and were already the perfect note to leave on.

ulkesh@beehaw.org on 31 May 12:34 collapse
CeruleanRuin@lemmings.world on 31 May 11:46 next collapse

I totally called Kovich being a time traveler, but them folding him into Daniels was a neat surprise, and felt like a naturally revelation. “Oh, of course he’s bloody Daniels.” It expanded both characters without diminishing their mystery at all.

Knowing that Calypso was meant to be the whole focus of season 6 is a hard blow, though. We’ll likely never get that story now. I’m glad they were able to at least tie it firmly back to the show, but man, it would have been fun to see how it played out. Why does Kovich need this Craft, and why does it require the ship to be de-refitted? Maybe now that the show is done they’ll give it a proper continuation in novel form. One can only hope.

End0fLine@programming.dev on 31 May 19:46 collapse

I would begrudgingly accept a novel series like we got with Voyager post getting back to Earth. I know we are getting Star Fleet Academy, but I want this time in the universe to be greatly expanded on.

phoenixz@lemmy.ca on 31 May 20:04 next collapse

Thank god that that’s over.

jimhensonslostpuppet@startrek.website on 02 Jun 00:39 collapse

Im not the biggest fan of Discovery but I’m curious how they would have made the Calypso plot the center of a season long arc

ValueSubtracted@startrek.website on 02 Jun 02:25 collapse

Hypothetically, I think I’d structure it somewhat similarly to season 5: a couple of episodes to establish the stakes, two or three more to gather information or materials, then a couple to put the plan together and enact it, and then ideally at least one to catch up with Zora after the events of “Calpyso.”

As it is, there are so many unanswered questions surrounding this mission that I hope we at least get a novel or something out of it.