Yes, I was incredulous and kind of pissed that they made it an “only a dream” thing.
On another note, I suppose it was too obvious to point out that Alara’s father is Robert Picardo, the holographic doctor from Voyager, but I see that her mother was in one episode of DS9.
There’s no way a military ship like the Orville doesn’t have some kind of command log. If ‘protocol 38’ is such a powerful command, and a career killer if misused, it has to show up as a high-level log entry. At some point, probably during a performance review, a ‘protocol 38’ order has to come to the attention of Mercer’s superiors and has to be explained.
I thought the ep did a great job executing horror tropes. I especially loved Evil Isaac lurking in the background of the shuttle bay. Holodeck episodes are always a bit of a cop-out, and I didn’t like the way the reveal was handled. Third-act exposition with a bunch of people sitting around explaining what happened is always eye-rolling.
IMO a more interesting story would be if we find out that it’s a simulation much earlier, and the crew, realizing what Alara has done, must go inside it to convince her to end the program. Then they have to convince her that they are real and not the horror versions of themselves. Hijinks!
Speaking of holodeck episodes, in a lot of ways this one reminded me of the Voyager ep Worst Case Scenario, which is great fun.
When it became overly obvious they were going down the “simulation/dream” route, we tried speculating when it had taken over. I thought she was going to “wake up” in engineering, still facing that fireball.
Excellent point I had failed to think of. You could look at the Holodeck/Dream trope in this episode as a commentary or reference rather than a simple cop-out. We might see this happen less and less as the show goes on. Once they really hit their stride, I hope they’ll be too busy creating their own show with their own style to lean on references as much. I know this is a McFarlane show, but still. They’re showing signs of becoming a very good ensemble sci-fi show*, with flawed ppl that are a little less serious than we’re used to. I’m hoping they can take it to the level they’re now flirting with.
It’s a dream/holodeck episodes are weak sauce.
*- Sherry Palmer’s character and acting is a little uneven, though.
To add a bit more to the discussion, I do like the discussion on whether it’s a cop-out for it to have been a dream/holodeck or an homage to other shows. I will say that I think they did the reveal at the best time, which is after a major character dies, compared to the nurse in sickbay, to explain it to the viewer. That worked for me.
Reading more here, though, I agree that not explaining it until the end, or having different versions show up to convince her it was real could have been a nice twist or added to the tension of it all. I did like the idea of a Cthuhlu-esque evil Q type big bad that they might encounter as well.
I do think we are asking them a bit much not to have some explanation because they have to assume not all viewers will be as savvy as us here! Sure, it fell a bit flat but now that they have done it once, it can be improved.
I was convinced she was going to wake up in sick bay, having been concussed by a beam falling on her as she actually rescued that crewman, and dreaming ever since.
Penny Johnson was scary being crazy. She had a standard crazy character to play, and standard lines, but she brought it off. In DS9 she had a standard, campy line to deliver when she realized that her husband had died and returned as prophet, or “worm hole alien”; “Oh My God.” But she brought it off.
On the bad side, she was much more attractive on DS9 than Orville.