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Review of Star Trek: Picard 2.4

2024 LA

By Paul LevinsonPublished 2 years ago 2 min read
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All of Star Trek: Picard 2.4 takes place in 2024 Los Angeles, which made for lots of enjoyable interludes and interactions.

I guess my favorite -- and there were many close contenders -- is Picard and a much younger Guinan. This conversation, in which Picard eventually tells young Guinan his name, explains some of the comfort and familiarity she has with him in Star Trek: The Next Generation, when he and we were more than thirty years younger. As you know if you read my reviews here on Vocal, I very much like time weaves like that.

On the other side of the profundity/light-hearted spectrum, I thought Seven and Raffi in that car, with Seven driving and Raffi coaching, doing their best to get away from the police, was hilarious. And you can't beat the way the two made good their escape -- Agnes beaming them out of the car. (Good thing, the car had to stop for the beaming to work -- had the two been beamed out while Seven was driving, that would left a car going 100-miles-per-hour or more, with no driver. Pretty dangerous.)

Speaking of Agnes -- my least favorite part of this episode was Agnes and the Borg Queen. This is no one's fault. The Borg creep me out. And I'd almost rather not see what might happen to Agnes. She's a great character (well acted by Alison Pill). Here's to her not being assimilated or whatever nice word the Borg Queen might come up with.

So the season's moving along well. I'm still annoyed by the commercial breaks -- I mean, to have to subscribe to a service and still get commercials just doesn't seem right. (Does Hulu do that, too?). But it's a measure of how good Star Trek: Picard is that I'm putting up with it. And I'll see you back here next week with my review of the next episode.

read this free little time travel story right here on Vocal

star wars
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About the Creator

Paul Levinson

Novels The Silk Code & The Plot To Save Socrates; LPs Twice Upon A Rhyme & Welcome Up; nonfiction The Soft Edge & Digital McLuhan, translated into 15 languages. Best-known short story: The Chronology Protection Case; Prof, Fordham Univ.

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