![]() La'an Noonien-Singh (Christina Chong) is responsible for her becoming an engineer. Carol Kane's character, Chief Engineer Pelia, even takes the Guinan role in this story, which when you remember that we learned in the second season premiere episode that her species has lived on Earth undetected for centuries, much like a certain El-Aurian, seems a little predictable, but it remained a surprise and that's down to good storytelling. And while this single-serving, time-traveling, alt-history return to Earth circa now is still better than the whole of the second season of " Picard," it could've benefited from the car interior shots during the driving scenes to have been filmed using a rig rather than rear projection or most likely a green screen.īut the twists and turns keep on coming and that's a good thing. It's just easier to imagine that he's a completely different character. This installment certainly shows some creative flair and while we're still not 100 percent convinced about the choice of Paul Wesley to portray James Kirk, he does carry this episode off well. There, fixed the problem for you Paramount. but there are quite a lot of principal characters in the cast - far more than there are episodes in what passes for a "season" these days - so are we going to do this in every episode? And what about the ones that don't get a full episode to themselves? The answer is - the only answer - is to have 20-or-so episodes in a season. This third episode of the second season is entitled "Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow" and is another, mostly-singular character-focused installment, which is fine. ![]() It seems so far we're having each episode focus on one principal character, so how about this old girl? (Image credit: Paramount Plus)
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