#and also vadic was the best goddamn villain and they should have done more with her oh my god
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a lot of people have said it, but Iâm throwing in my two cents just to get it off my chest.
Picard season 3 was . Bad . For a LOT of reasons . It felt like - as many before me have expressed - a self-insert fanfic with the dullest self-insert in history.
Jack Crusher wasnât much of a character but he could have had some promise if they hadnât spent an aggravating amount of time having him decree how different he always felt, you guys. Did you get that part? Heâd always felt different. That sort of dialogue might have flown if we were dealing with Picardâs adolescent son, but instead weâre dealing with a 24 year old played by a 35 year old who looks every bit his age. (It was a hard 24 years, we must assume.)
The reason that Jack Crusher didnât work for me personally, though, wasnât because of how clichĂŠ his character was. I would have let that pass much easier if it wasnât for the big olâ elephant in the room. And that is simply that :
JACK CRUSHER WAS NEVER NECESSARY
Jack may have served a purpose to the storyline that was presented if only because he was the sole reason there was a Big Bad to be defeated in the first place. Everyone wanted to kidnap him, he brought the old gang back together just to protect him and then later save him from said Big Bad which was also actually .. him. Everything Was About Jack. But Iâm not talking about the main plot. I Really Donât Want to Talk About the Main Plot. Ever. What I want to talk about is what Jack represented that made him so unnecessary:
He was intended to represent Jean-Luc Picardâs only reason to start living.
Personally, that really, really offended me. Picard didnât need to have a biological kid to have a purpose. In fact, itâs been established time and time again that he wasnât ever really dad material. More of a... weirdly intense uncle. For a while, he wasnât a fan of kids at all. Eventually, though, Picard is seen to warm to the idea of letting children within his general vicinity. This starts in TNG and continues on in season 1 of Picard. The Only Categorically Good Season of this whole. show.
In season 1, we see flashbacks of Jean-Lucâs relationship with a young Elnor, how he would read him stories and have sword fights with him. He was an absent father to an adopted child he hadnât even realised heâd adopted and yet Elnor still fought for his hopeless cause. In much the same way, Picard meets Dahj and then later, Soji. He feels a kinship with these androids because of their connection to Data. He wants to protect Soji becase he couldnât protect Dahj and Soji even canonically questions whether she should allow Picard to act as her father figure before she begins to remember where she came from. Both of these dynamics were infinitely more interesting and a lot deeper rooted. Soji and Elnor were both young twenty-somethings without parental guidance but found that guidance through Picard. Soji had her connection to Jurati, too, and Elnor had his with Seven and Raffi and thatâs what made the whole group so intriguing to follow. They all had interesting connections to each other that had so many avenues to explore.
Unfortunately, the show decided to more or less write Soji and Elnor out of the story come season 2. Elnor was killed off for the majority of the season and only brought back by Q intervention in the last episode. Soji wasnât even a part of the story at all. And do you know whatâs sad about that? Whatâs really sad? Season 2 was trying to sell us the exact same message as season 3. That Picard needed a reason to live. But, like, not that reason. Not the reasons heâd already been given in the form of his found family with his Romulan and android adopted children, or even the rest of the La Sirena crew. No no no, we canât have that, better get rid of them. This time, Laris is the focal point. Picard had been avoiding a romantic relationship with her because of a never before mentioned dark history surrounding his motherâs suicide. Because, sure, at this point, why not? While weâre at it, letâs also kill off Rios in the most slap-in-the-face out of character way possible and fling Jurati at the Borg for good measure just so she wonât be around for season 3. Her character development into the Borg Queen was pretty intriguing, but weâll totally ignore that they even exist post her departure, just for funsies. Oh, and Soji and Elnor? Best not mention them at all come that third and final season. Otherwise, people might get the crazy notion that Picard already had a reason not to hunker down and die at the vinyard at the tender age of 104.
Season 3 picks up where season 2 leaves off in that Picard is now in that aforementioned romantic relationship with Laris. Except, no he isnât because he immediately gets an emergency call from his ex and literally never sees or talks to Laris ever again. There wasnât even a throw-away line or implied reference to her, but by now Iâm sure you know the reason for that.
Thatâs right, folks. Because if we were allowed to remember Laris and what she meant to Picard, then we might just remember that other thing. Say it with me now!!
JACK CRUSHER WAS NEVER NECESSARY!!
In summary, there were so many brilliant options to give Picard for signficant found family dynamics, but the show just wasnât interested in any of them. Season 3 wanted a Picard who had given it all up, who was ready to die because heâd never had a family to pass on his legacy. They wanted him at his lowest so that weâd all rejoice to see him return to the TNG crew. Donât get me wrong, Iâm a massive TNG fan and I could rave about the fan service and nostalgia porn for hours on end. If season 3 had stood alone as a singular unconnected event, it might even have been passable as a warm hug from old and beloved characters with some fun new spins to their stories along the way, juust so long as you didnât squint too hard at the actual attempt at plot writing going on in the background.
But the fact of the matter is, Picard season 3 came far too late into the game. Season 1 held the building blocks to something new and interesting. By the end of season 2, it was becoming clear we were never going to see those blocks stand. By season 3, those blocks were just scattered headstones in a graveyard.
They teased us with the potential new show of Captain Seven and her Number One Raffi Musiker and that might have just been okay. . .
. . .If the La Sirena Crew had been allowed to be a part of that future.
In closing: Picard season 3? Too little, too late, mate. đđť
#star trek picard#picard spoilers#anti picard#jean luc picard#jack crusher#anti jack crusher#soji asha#elnor#raffi musiker#seven of nine#i didn't mention everything i didn't like here or in fact everything I DID like#because if we ignore the plot and just focus on seeing the crew back then yes I did in fact enjoy quite a bit of it#and also vadic was the best goddamn villain and they should have done more with her oh my god#but i had to get this off my chest#and also yes i acknowledge that elnor was very much seven and raffi's adopted kid as much as picard's#but this has to focus on picard because.. well.. that's the name of the show right?#could've fooled me. i thought it was the jack crusher show#ok ok i'm done bitterness out#it's said and i'm moving on
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