@Hammerjack Great points. I agree it’s like they wrote multiple versions of the film and then couldn’t decide which one they were actually shooting. I liked the main character they set up, was looking forward to the audience learning to root for him, but then I stopped caring what the audience or any of the characters thought at all. The 1987 movie is lovable-fun bad, this is just awful-bad sloppy filmmaking. Biggest facepalm: hotdog cop’s son randomly deciding to fight the invaders…
Tom Riley
Software Developer at WonderProxy. #scifi #cyberpunk #startrek #technoir #industrialmusic #javascript #reactjs #webdev #programming
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Tom Riley@mas.toto
Star Trek Social Club•What programming languages exist in the Star Trek Universe?
1·3 years agodeleted by creator
Tom Riley@mas.toto
Star Trek Social Club•Episode Discussion | Star Trek: Strange New Worlds | 2x10 "Hegemony"
2·3 years ago@JohnnyDelirious @Zoboomafoo One moment Spok is frantically trying to find Chapel on the Kayuga, but then doesn’t even mention survivors when they plan to crash it. It’s too much of a stretch. There must be some key plot here they deliberately didn’t show us. We don’t see the initial attack on the Kayuga at all. Why was the lone Gorn (stuck?) on that side of the line trying to access command codes on a destroyed ship? I think we’ll get a revealing flashback in S03E01.
Tom Riley@mas.toto
Star Trek Social Club•Episode Discussion | Star Trek: Strange New Worlds | 2x08 "Under the Cloak of War"
3·3 years ago@williams_482 @triktrek (It is mentioned elsewhere that human soldiers in the Eugenics Wars were given drugs to make them better fighters, and human history remembers this as a huge mistake/atrocity).
Tom Riley@mas.toto
Star Trek Social Club•Episode Discussion | Star Trek: Strange New Worlds | 2x08 "Under the Cloak of War"
2·3 years ago@williams_482 @triktrek Many fans react badly to the P-12 serum as a lazy plot device, but consider: In key battles, it’d make tactical sense for Klingons to draw Fed soldiers into hand to hand combat, because they’re typically experienced blade warriors. It would then be attractive to the Fed to develop something like P-12 as a counter-tactic. Then consider there is a potential sub-plot exploring the ethics of humans revisiting their Eugenics Wars-era mistakes.
Tom Riley@mas.toto
Star Trek Social Club•Episode Discussion | Star Trek: Strange New Worlds | 2x08 "Under the Cloak of War"
3·3 years ago@ValueSubtracted This could be the case whether or not Rah started the fight at the end, but after rewatching, it feels like M’Benga’s actions were all preparing for that outcome (or preparing to protect himself?) Rah of course also has a motive to kill M’Benga - he’s the only person who knows what actually happened with the Klingon commanders on J’Gal.
Tom Riley@mas.toto
Star Trek Social Club•Episode Discussion | Star Trek: Strange New Worlds | 2x08 "Under the Cloak of War"
4·3 years ago@ValueSubtracted …thinking he is the superior fighter, and B) test if he can get a quick, sharp attack past his guard? Was he prepping in case he wanted/needed to kill him?
We don’t see the end fight, but we believe from M’Benga looking Pike in the eyes, twice saying “I didn’t start the fight” that he didn’t.
However, in M’Benga’s PTSD-ridden mind, where he never “finished” the mission to kill Rah, maybe he really doesn’t think he started it, because Rah “started it” on J’Gal?
Tom Riley@mas.toto
Star Trek Social Club•Episode Discussion | Star Trek: Strange New Worlds | 2x08 "Under the Cloak of War"
6·3 years ago@ValueSubtracted
Did anyone else wonder (spoiler warning):When Rah arrives on Enterprise, all the war vets hate him, but did M’Benga’s damaged mind actually awaken his military instincts as a defence mechanism, compelling him to “finish” the unfinished mission to kill Rah?
When M’Benga & Rah first spar, M’Benga says he thought about not showing up but changed his mind because “Klingon judo is good exercise”. Does he then use the session in a safe environment to A) trick Rah into…
Tom Riley@mas.toto
Star Trek Social Club•Episode Discussion | Star Trek: Strange New Worlds | 2x08 "Under the Cloak of War"
8·3 years agodeleted by creator
Tom Riley@mas.toto
Star Trek Social Club•Which bartender do you feel was better utilized in their show, Guinan or Quark?
2·3 years agodeleted by creator
@startrekexplained @keeb420 I forced my way through PIC S1 last year but abandoned it when I discovered SNW. I cannot with chaotic plot arcs threaded everywhere and shoehorned cliffhangers that turn out to be insignificant. TNG/SNW tell a complete story per-episode with some wider arcs holding seasons together. That works and is the only trek I can enjoy. The PIC/DISC format invites lazy writing and breaks suspension of disbelief, which is needed to appreciate trek.
Tom Riley@mas.toto
Star Trek Social Club•Manny Coto, The Showrunner Who Tried To Save 'Star Trek: Enterprise,' Dies
3·3 years agodeleted by creator
Tom Riley@mas.toto
Star Trek Social Club•Manny Coto, The Showrunner Who Tried To Save 'Star Trek: Enterprise,' Dies
3·3 years agodeleted by creator
Tom Riley@mas.toto
Star Trek Social Club•Episode Discussion | Star Trek: Strange New Worlds | 2x04 "Among the Lotus Eaters"
2·3 years ago@psychothumbs @khaosworks That *was* interesting. His instincts work overpowering Zac in the phaser battle but then we don’t actually know if he’ll “remember” he can’t just beat him senseless afterwards. Maybe we’ll see some Pike backstory at some point that shows him learning ethical lessons when he’s younger.
Tom Riley@mas.toto
Star Trek Social Club•Episode Discussion | Star Trek: Strange New Worlds | 2x04 "Among the Lotus Eaters"
2·3 years ago@ValueSubtracted second best episode of S2 so far, after Ad Astra Per Aspera. The type of setup has already been done many times but there are enough new ideas to keep it interesting. The old man is a great single-episode character.
Tom Riley@mas.toto
Star Trek Social Club•Episode Discussion | Star Trek: Strange New Worlds | 2x04 "Among the Lotus Eaters"
3·3 years agodeleted by creator
@briongloid @Speckle Great list. Chain of Command is my favorite two-parter also. Patrick Stewart’s performance as Picard deteriorating under torture, but refusing to give in, and still mentally deconstructing his captor is immense. Also we learn a lot about the Cardassians’ militaristic regime, and how much they’ve “dehumanized” their enemies.
Tom Riley@mas.toto
Star Trek Social Club•Why the galactic barrier and transporters don’t match real science, and why warp drive might
4·3 years ago@Nmyownworld @SeeJayEmm @startrek I mean, if you’re OK with ship sensors that can analyze space in tiny detail, it’s reasonable that transporter tech makes sure the target area is safe/unobstructed, and safety protocols prevent transport if there’s risk. We often see a human operator scanning for good transport locations too.
There’s obvious issues with the concept of course, but Star Trek is the type of scifi that you can trust with your suspension of disbelief, and you’ll usually be rewarded.
Tom Riley@mas.toto
Star Trek Social Club•Episode Discussion | Star Trek: Strange New Worlds | 2x01 "The Broken Circle"
1·3 years agodeleted by creator


…when they could easily just escape from the house. As you said, it introduces enough good ideas that this could have been a decent fun film but they were all wasted. Great review, thank you 😃