Discovery season 5 episode 7
Discovery beams Moll and L'ak into their sickbay and begin treating L'ak for his injury from two episodes ago, but not knowing Breen physiology, have no idea what to do to help him. Culber eventually gets the idea the Breen heal better in the cold, and Discovery returns to Federation HQ for an old Breen refrigeration suit, and convert the bio-bed to keep him frosty as well. Unfortunately, once at HQ, Discovery learns a Breen dreadnought is on the way for Moll and L'ak. The Admiral tells Burnham they'll be jumping as far as possible for the Breen to follow them (apparently the Breen have the capability to track the spore drive jumps? Pretty sure that's never been established before) but Burnham argues that's just delaying the inevitable and the Admiral agrees to let Discovery stay put. Burnham presses L'ak for why they Breen are so keen on getting them. The duo refuses to answer, but Burnham realizes L'ak is royalty. L'ak confirms, he's the last direct descendant of the Emperor who died, making him his Uncle's way to the throne above the other Primarchs. And we also find out Rayner's homeworld was occupied by one of the other Breen Primarchs, which has left him hostile towards them.
Meanwhile, Tilly, Adira, Stamets and Book are trying to discern the clue to the final piece to the Progenitor's technology. They believe the clue refers to to a Betezoid book, or rather, the original manuscript. Not knowing if it (or even a copy of the book) still exists, they track down someone that know anything about handwritten manuscripts, which turns up one result... Their own Jett Reno. I'm sorry, but this is dumb. Why would a Starfleet engineer originally from the 23rd century know anything about a book written in the 24th century? She admits that part of her 'resume' is embellished, but still... This feels like the writers stretching just to include a scene for Reno. But she tells them about the “Eternal Gallery and Archive,” a mobile repository of knowledge from all worlds. I like this idea of a mobile archive, but I feel like it's unnecessary in Star Trek, when every Starfleet computer has the Federation database. There's no need for one mobile storage archive when essentially every computer across the Federation serves that purpose. Apparently the clue may be a catalog card from this archive. Meanwhile, Stamets and Book are trying to discovery the origins of the card and having no luck narrowing it down. Because this clue was left by a Betazoid, Stamets suggests maybe there is a empathic impression left on it (while he have seen physic impressions left by telepaths before... it's usually the result of a traumatic death, not something they can willing do), and Book is able to sense a plasma storm... The Badlands.
Bluffing that they've already made a deal to hand over Moll and L'ak to the Primarch that occupied Rayner's home world, the Breen agree to leave. Unfortunately, Moll and L'ak pull an ill-conceived escape attempt, which puts L'ak's life in damager once again. Needing a Breen doctor to save him, Starfleet negotiates with L'ak's uncle, who warns them if L'ak dies while in their custody, it'll mean war. Book is able to convince Moll to return to sickbay as L'ak dies. Moll suggests she may be of use to the Breen, because she claims they were married, and tells them about the Progenitor's technology (not sure how she could find it at this point, when she doesn't have any of the pieces Discovery collected, and didn't even see all the clues). The Breen leave, and Discovery prepares to recover the final piece of the puzzle...
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I assume L'ak will be brought back to life using the Progenitor's technology. And it'll probably lead to the first Breen/Federation alliance given they've established L'ak is basically the next Breen emperor. That being the case though, I think they should have explained why he isn't. I mean, they establish there are 6 Primarchs fighting each other to be emperor, with L'ak's uncle apparently being the top contender because he has L'ak....But why isn't L'ak, or his uncle, already Emperor of the Breen given this direct bloodline?
Also, just to point something silly out... The Breen in Discovery seem to have a lot of blood based stuff. Like blood bounty and bloodline succession.... It just seems strange when the Breen are known not to have blood.
The Breen dreadnought design disappointed me. It was just a generic looking gigantic city ship. They should have designed it to look like a future version of the Breen ships we saw in DS9. Starfleet seems very concerned about facing off against the Breen given what happened the last time they entered Federation space... During the Dominion War. I find it hard to believe Starfleet still knows so little about the Breen after 800 years. Not to mention, they were pretty much on equal footing once Starfleet overcame their energy dampening weapon.
I do like how they've pivoted the villains from these small time "couriers" to a faction of the Breen. At last, it feels like they've got proper villains that can match Starfleet. Although I'm not sure how they could do much of anything when Discovery has information they don't have...
The writing behind this Macguffin hunt continues to be incredibly lazy, filled with coincidences and convivences. These scientists wanted this technology to be found, right? So why did they make the clues so incredibly vague? Without literally being handed the scientists names and planets of origin, I doubt they could have solved these last two clues. This clue, they seem to have made some wild guess work about it being a book, which there just so happens to only be ONE book with that title, and how convenient the ONE person that might know anything about it in their database happens to be Reno of all people. And the hiding places that frankly shouldn't be around after 800 years? The Badlands and a wormhole in-particular are especially dumb given how quickly the plasma storms shift and a wormhole, in general, is not a long lived phenomena.
Also... copy of a book? The original manuscript? This book was written in the 24th century, right? I know some writers still sometimes use paper in the 24th century (such as Jake in DS9) but wouldn't the book be digital (or whatever the 24th century equivalent is) and in the Federation database?
Book's instance to talk to Moll in this episode doesn't come off believable. At one point he claims he has the best chance getting through to her because he's talked to her the most... For like 5 minutes while trying to not die on the Mirror Enterprise? That's not exactly the most compelling reasoning there Book. And while I get he sorta sees her as his sister, being the daughter of his mentor, she's made it clear she doesn't see it that way because her father abandoned her. How the writers have him approaching the situation could be better. I did like how someone finally called him out for not being the most trustworthy after what he did last season.
Rayner at one point suggests using "thoron fields and duranium shadows" to bluff the Breen into thinking HQ is more heavily armed than they are. Obviously the writers watched some DS9, because this was used in "Emissary" and Martok suspected it in "The Way of the Warrior". But... I just don't buy that ploy would still work in the 32nd century, with 800 years worth of advancements to sensor technology.
Speaking of Federation HQ's defenses... How come they didn't use their distortion field to protect themselves from the Breen? I know originally they needed several Starships to help power the thing, but that was also the encompass the entire fleet. They wouldn't need it that big in this situation. Also seems to highlight why moving Federation/Starfleet headquarters off a planet was a bad idea.