"I think it's very much what they say in that last moment they have together in – that Kwejian quote. She also suggested there will be a bigger attachment coming our way in terms of the Booker/Burnham romance, saying the pair will "always be tied together in some way". And I think it's going to be lovely – in the truest sense of the word." Speaking exclusively to Digital Spy, Sonequa Martin-Green said: "I can say that it's going to be refreshing. Isa's program that gave him form on the Khi'eth.Of course, the premise for season five is firmly under wraps, but now that season four is finished, we can start to theorise what lies around the next star system. How are they going to give Gray a body again? I'd like to think it's as easy as getting the Kelpiens to share their holo tech as it was Dr. Even so, it's nice to know the maintenance drones are a mobile option, despite being a little flimsy. ![]() We know that it evolves into the Discovery computer of "Calypso". Is the sphere data stuck in the DOT-23s now? No, that can't be right. But if we work at it, miracles can happen. It takes time, effort, and understanding. The need to connect is at our core as sentient beings. ![]() It radiated outward until no one even remembered that connection was possible anymore. With Book able to navigate the spore drive and Tilly presumably still looking into dark matter navigation methods, I wonder if he'll finally transfer ships.ĭisconnection. Vance telling him that she made the right move probably didn't help. Stamets is still bitter at Burnham for what she put him through. She lost the ship to a pirate queen and nearly watched her bridge crew suffocate in front of her. Tilly's probably traumatized by her time with the con. There are a lot of loose ends left over for the next season to build on. Of course, that's not the end of the story. A little long, but they were also the humor breaks, what with Book's adrenaline high and Zareh's archetypal villain thing and all. The turbo-lift sequences were neat, I'll admit. They are so much more complex than human hearts. ![]() Wouldn't someone who has killed as many and as ruthlessly as Osyraa is reputed to have done insist on making sure her nemesis was dead? And what crime boss leaves their victim with a weapon in their hand? (Cue the "ding dong, the witch is dead" musical number.)īut, here's the thing, would someone as thorough and established as Osyraa really expect Burnham to just succumb to the nano-matter? Since the Kelpiens have evolved beyond vahar'ai at this point, it's interesting to note that his default survival instinct is to live in fear despite the lack of any real threat.Īll of these happenings in the nebula, including the happy accident of Gray's physicality, could've been handily dealt with in its own episode, allowing us to really absorb the devastating nature of Su'Kal's existence and really worry about the away team.Īnd while I previously predicted the sphere data would be the deus ex machina that saved the day - it did save Owo, mind you - it's Burnham who (once again) saves the day by (almost literally) being reborn out of the data core's programmable matter in time to put an end to Osyraa. : Even in fear, Su'Kal, you can still step forward.Saru's attempts to connect with the only Kelpien he's met since traveling to this future is a study in patience and understanding.Įven in fear, Su'Kal, you can still step forward. Then, there are the black boxes of Burn-ed starships scattered through junk heaps and salvage yards which needed to be scavenged for.Ĭombined with the data from Ni'Var, hard-won with hard truths, the black boxes led the Burn-hunters to the Verubin Nebula and Su'Kal, a polyploid survivor of the Khi'eth crew.īeing traumatically orphaned at a young age and then spending over a century with nothing but holographic tutors and companions would mess with anyone. Only a crew traveling between worlds (not, as it were, sheltering in place like most post-Burn ships and fleets) would have the opportunity to recognize that common tune. Taken from stem to stern, it's actually a very elegantly laid out puzzle.įirst, there's the Khi'eth's distress signal, contorted into music by subspace interference, which worked its way into the subconscious of a multitude of species over generations and became a source of comfort as a traditional lullaby, tying together disparate races. On the one hand, we have the mystery of The Burn, a cataclysmic event that wreaked tragedy across the galaxy and obliterated the tenuous balance the Federation had been maintaining.
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