Star Trek: Discovery 1.15: Will You Take My Hand?
Akiva Goldsman, Gretchen J. Berg, and Aaron Harberts
Akiva Goldsman
The biggest task this season finale had to
achieve was closure. It had to take all
the major plot and character threads and bring them to something close to a
point where the writers could take some time between seasons, see what worked
and what didn’t, and pave a way forward.
It’s not at all unlike what every Trek
series since the original has had to do after some struggles in their first
seasons, so it’s not necessarily a new challenge.
On the whole, the season ends with the end of
the Klingon War, forged out of cooperation vs. conquest, and the crew of the Discovery moving on to a new
mission. The peace was brokered by
Burnham, so she gets closure on the war that she started by helping place the
first stones on the path to the bridges to be built in the centuries to
come. It all hangs together rather well
if one ignores how close the Federation came to violating its own ideals in the
name of winning a war that is far too expansive to result in the mildly simmering
tensions a decade later.
It’s fine for the foray into the Mirror
Universe to have taught Burnham an important lesson, that the brutal means
championed by those like Empress Georgiou are not the right choices for the
Prime Universe’s Federation. The problem
is that she literally has to go up against the whole of Starfleet and even
Sarek to drive that point home, and that undermines a great deal of the
character of the Federation and specific characters in the process. It’s building Burnham up by tearing everyone
else to shreds. (Also, Sarek smiles far
too much for a Vulcan!)
Meanwhile, it’s interesting to note that Qo’nos
(at least the part of it that we get to see) is basically a den of impropriety
and aliens that doesn’t really seem to do much to explore the truth about the
Klingons and their society. At least, it
might have been time better spent on more details about the schism between the
major houses, since that had been mentioned several times as a factor that was
complicating and escalating the war. It’s
also at the heart of how the war is more or less resolved, so having very few
Klingons in an exploration of their homeworld (even a very specific spot on the
Qo’nos) is strange.
It actually begs the audience to consider more
and more how the Klingons we see in Discovery
don’t seem to match up well at all with any of the versions we’ve seen in the
rest of the history of the Prime Universe.
Previously, there were comments about Captain Archer’s visits to Qo’nos,
which means the episodes and scenes from Enterprise
that explicitly line up with the established lore of Next Generation and subsequent series is supposed to be related. It’s not just updated makeup effects and
appearance; there are elements of history and culture that are radically
altered.
One very interesting plot point is that Empress
Georgiou is essentially unleashed upon the galaxy, which means that there is a
good chance she’ll show up in the future.
At least, one would hope, because there is still the open question of
where the Lorca of the Prime Universe might be.
It would be very interesting to see if Jason Isaacs is still part of the
equation in the casting rumors for the second season.
One final note: it’s hard not to be of two minds when it comes to the presence of the Enterprise in the final scene. On the one hand, it’s interesting to see how they re-envisioned the appearance for this entry, and there is a thrill to the idea that it could be more than a teaser. On the other hand, it would have been a really good way to end the story of this Discovery completely, since the table has been cleared and this passes the adventure baton to Captain Pike. But perhaps that says it all when it comes to Star Trek: Discovery; despite all the fun of a new series in the franchise, this first season leaves a lot of fans wary and perhaps a bit jaded by the sloppy storytelling and questionable character arcs.
- The first season finale manages to wrap up most of the plot and character arcs
- It was fun to see the Enterprise!
- The Federation has a lot of explaining to do
- It’s still very hard to figure out how this Klingon culture fits