SpaceScotsman

joined 2 years ago
[–] SpaceScotsman@startrek.website 13 points 10 hours ago (3 children)

My point was that brave's solution, like Signal's, is dependent on microsoft playing fair. If microsoft decides they don't want brave, signal, or anyone else using DRM to interfere with their screen scraping chatbot, there is not going to be an easy way to fix it.

[–] SpaceScotsman@startrek.website 3 points 10 hours ago (1 children)

I picked up Project Hail Mary from the library this week. Only just started but I'm enjoying it so far.

[–] SpaceScotsman@startrek.website 64 points 13 hours ago (7 children)

They haven't blocked the windows feature, they're using DRM to interfere with it. Microsoft could easily change how the DRM works any time they want, rendering all these hacks useless.

I agree that this episode seems to be pushing more on the 9-Rose relationship than it ought to. It really doesn't feel like they work as anything other than companionship between two people that have lost their place in their respective worlds.

[–] SpaceScotsman@startrek.website 3 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I am not a fan of this episode. It has some really great plot points and themes but the whole episode fails to bring them together in a satisfying way, and most of the guest characters aren't really useful.

Simon Pegg, in my mind, made for an OK editor, but this story would have been great with him as the Editor-In-Chief. I don't see why we needed an alien with an unpronounceable name and a CGI design that has aged incredibly poorly. Humans are perfectly capable of being awful to each other without outside intervention, and here was an opportunity to play that up. Pegg could have been great as an evil mastermind instead of a mere henchman.

With Adam, I'm confused. Rose has changed her look since the last ep, and the way they act in the beginning seems to suggest some time has passed since they left the museum. But then it doesn't appear that time has passed at all because Adam feigns feeling uneasy and wants to be alone. He leaves at the end of this episode with a character arc so unsatisfying it might be more accurate to say he didn't have one at all. The doctor does something incredibly nonsensical and leaves him, a known alien artefact profiteer, with the stuff installed in him, even though he makes a show of erasing the phone answering machine. Despite trying to scare him, he would obviously have the ability to analyse, pilfer, and sell what is in him. Nothing about his character makes any sense.

Cathica and Suki are alright, but I am not sure they really did anything of much consequence, excepting cathica jumping in right at the very end.

The standout guest for me here is Tamsin Grieg as the sales medic. I forgot she was ever in DW. A future where they upsell medical treatment like they would options in a car is freaky, even down to them installing extras that are on offer without even asking. Her creepy performance really sells how weird it all is.

I don't like the whole body horror "you can see inside your brain" stuff, even with the dated CGI. Gives me the ick. And also makes no sense - if you have a chip, why on earth do you need trepanning other than to shock the viewers?

Which brings me to the themes and major plot points. We have:

  • future medical horror show (used better in the next series with 10)
  • workplace political drama,
  • journalism and its role in politics (I think this alone should have been the plot),
  • conspiracies vs freedom fighters,
  • privacy rights (very perceptive in ~2000),
  • digital money and worker scrip,
  • racism (RTD re-used this "you don't see racism" idea to much better effect in Gatwa's series); Just to name a few. If the episode had focused more on just one of these that would have been better.

The design of the station itself is confusing, even if the CGI visuals and set design are nice. It has spinny bits, but because they're always in the central column it clearly has artificial mavity, so why does it need the spinny bits‽ I also don't rally understand why they needed the "it's really hot" ventilation plot point - usually larger animals tend to have a lower metabolism, not higher, and the editor was going to invite the doctor up anyway. And you don't ventilate the get rid of heat in space, you radiate it.

As usual I enjoyed the score, from classic themes to the upbeat accompaniment during the tourism scene early in the episode, and the later conspiratorial detective melody.

The only thing that really happens of any note here is the perhaps unnecessary setup for the series finale, and a deepening of 9 and Rose's relationship, which could have easily happened in any scenario.

[–] SpaceScotsman@startrek.website 4 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

My theory - M'benga's daughter had a degenerative disease and her pattern was stable enough to put into the buffer.

But Batel's problem is she has loads of living Gorn inside her, and so has Gorn DNA in very close proximity to her own. At one point they even say they're co-dependent on each other. They probably didn't want to end up with a "The Fly"/Tuvix situation.

[–] SpaceScotsman@startrek.website 11 points 6 days ago (3 children)

This was a good mix to start with - a serious episode and a fun silly one.

The first acts as a really good introduction for Scotty, giving him a chance to build up his character with some insurmountable engineering problems that, with some coaching, he surmounts. The second is a nice way to round off Spock and Chapel's relationship, poking fun at the mess that following the canon has left us in, using Trelane as a stand-in for the fans.

various thoughts on the plot:

  • Ortegas seems to have been left with a bit of trauma, being part digested will do that to you I guess. Hopefully La'an will spot this and help out.
  • Una mentions a "couple of litres" of blood. Did she mean pints, and the writers did a find/replace to make it metric and more futurey? Because "a couple of litres" is a lot.
  • Camera spin continues to be a big part of the visual language. It gives me a headache and I have to close my eyes whenever they do this. There were quite a few instances of roll in the first episode that were a bit too much for me.
  • John de Lancie and Rhys Darby make the perfect duo for these characters.
  • Scotty mentions not drinking, but ends up having to take some when he eats something dodgy at the batchelor party. Previously (later?) Scotty has been shown to be a fan of drink, I guess now it's canon that had there not been alien interference, he may have always been teetotal.
  • While Chapel is dealing with Batel, the Gorn hatchlings seem to agitate when the ship first goes close to the binary stars. Then, at the end of the episode when the ship has been suspended between the stars for a long time, no real mention is made of this. I guess the blood infusions and operations just kind of negated all that? Feels like Chekov's gun got loaded and then forgotten about.

I take issue with this article using the language "lagging behind in the use of generative AI". That language seems to imply there is something wrong in this behaviour.

[–] SpaceScotsman@startrek.website 15 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Good idea - if you also cap car speeds at 15mph

This is such a good episode. The mood from the very beginning is great, and it's got a kind of tension that leads right up to the reveal of the Dalek. This is another reveal that really early on made me hate the "next time" trailers, because it interrupts your ability to emphasize with the unknown Metaltron being tortured. Watching it for the first time I knew what the Daleks were, so it didn't bother me as much that it was being imprisoned and controlled - it's a deadly killing machine. But that's not why its in prison, being controlled, it's there because Van Statten is a horrible human being.

Van Statten is a great character. It can be very easy to verge off into cartoon villain territory with his type, but here I think it got the tone of overly confident self assured rich person you love to hate just right. In 2000s, we thought that in the future they'd be in bunkers, hiding away doing their evil deeds behind the scenes. Instead, nowadays they're just openly evil out for everyone to see. When the doctor and his assistant plane him towards the end of the episode, that makes for a very satisfying ending. (Van Statten owns "the internet" - I wonder if he got conned into buying a little black box with a blinking light on top?)

The way the doctor is written and directed in this episode is fantastic. It's a complete role reversal from what we normally expect. Often the Dalek (and Rose) take the position of the caring emotional one, and the Doctor is consumed by hatred. It's nice that we see more of the background of what makes 9 who he is, and that he finally gets some sort of absolution to move on a bit, all the better that it comes from a Dalek pointing out that he is capable of love again.

I felt that this episode was trying to push a kind of romance, or at least light infatuation, between Rose and Adam, which just bugs me to no end. Rose still has an interest in Mickey at this point, there's a budding relationship (not really romantic at this point) with the doctor, and Adam is just a completely unlikeable character. He obviously knows that his boss is torturing this alien, and he goes along with it because he gets to play with cool gadgets and have his ego stroked. Rose has more chemistry with the Dalek in this ep than she does with Adam.

The Dalek itself is great. The gold redesign looks amazing and less plasticky than the white and blue of old. The CGI is pretty good too. The contrast between the broken dalek that can't even do a full 360 with it's eye stalk, and later having some glamour bullet time shots as it rotates it's middle section all the way around is really cool. The direction of having some of the deaths happen off screen with screams echoing down a corridor, and the Dalek being smart enough to use water to electrocute hundreds of people at once really adds to the fear, because an episode of death after death can get a bit much, so the variation helps.

Really good episode, and it has a nice message driving throughout that you should question your instincts. Also it continues a running theme of RTD's in doctor who that a lot of the problems that happen do so because of greed.

I'm pretty sure those guts are just instant noodles with green food dye :)

I wonder if they ran out of budget there

The character interactions in this one are really nice. Especially the doctor and Jackie, him being blunt and her being caring.

view more: next ›