Star Trek: Discovery 1.03: Context is for Kings
Bryan Fuller, Gretchen J. Berg, Aaron Harberts, and Craig Sweeny
Akiva Goldsman
The first two episodes of Star Trek: Discovery were an unusual beast. While on the one hand they were essentially a
pilot for the new series, the format and relatively self-contained aspects of
the story made it feel like an expensive TV-movie that would be followed up by
the series proper. It introduced some
important characters and the overall status quo between the Federation and the
Klingon Empire, but it felt oddly discordant with the rest of the Trek Prime
timeline in which it is meant to reside.
As a result, this episode is more of a pilot
than the premiere installments, considering that this is the first we get to
see of the titular USS Discovery and
its crew. It uses the supposed mutiny of
Michael Burnham as backdrop to some character conflicts, and Starfleet is
trying to figure out how to deal with the Klingon threat, but beyond that,
there’s not a lot of connection to the premiere. In fact, one could see this episode rewritten
slightly and serving as a perfectly capable introduction to the series.
As far as that series goes, it remains somewhat
unnerving. While there are still winks
to the familiar Trek continuity that so many know and love, the overall tone
and content runs contrary to many established items in the “canon”. The end of this episode, for example,
introduces a mode of travel that would be revolutionary well after the TNG era,
let alone making any kind of sense for a Starfleet merely a handful of years
past “The Cage”. Never mind that the Discovery is essentially the Starfleet
version of a black ops project; one could see Captain Lorca being a key member
of Section 31.
Considering the serialized nature of Star Trek:Discovery, there’s every
chance that this apparent continuity contradiction is actually a plot
point. After all, one can see the story
progressing in such a way that this theoretical “spore” concept turns out to be
a horrific mistake, killing just about everyone or sending them into an unknown
location from which they never return. It
would be an interesting commentary on how the militarization of science, in the
name of ending a war as quickly as possible, can end badly.
That tension is all over the episode, either
stated plainly or informing scene after scene.
It’s not quite the same military/civilian conflict that drove Battlestar Galactica, but it has a lot
of the same flavor. A better callback
might actually be some of the concepts in Wrath
of Khan, which makes sense, given the involvement of Nicholas Meyer. It’s fairly interesting, especially when
there are decisions being made with an “end justifies the means” mentality.
If there is one thing that continues to bother
me about Discovery, it’s how some
important plot points are often glossed over with the wave of a narrative
hand. How is Lorca’s decision to
commission Burnham remotely kosher? It’s
as much of a head-scratcher as why Burnham did about half of what she did in
the premiere, which is a concerning sign.
It really feels as though the writing for this series needs to tighten
up now that the preliminaries are essentially over.
- We finally get to see the Discovery
- Plot and continuity holes appear to abound, which can be frustrating for Trek devotees