These Old Scientists
The cross-over episode with Lower Decks. I was admittedly reticent, but gladly, I needn't of been. I can be a bit of a curmudgeon when it comes to not breaking the fourth wall on Star Trek and messing too much with established lore (which has always been a problem I've had with revisiting the earlier time periods in general). Most of this comes from feeling that the people being given the immense privilege of continuing Star Trek either don't get it, don't care, or are just incompetent (or all three). Strange New Worlds has
definitely loosened me on that hang-up because it finally feels like we have people in charge who know what they're doing, and whilst I don't agree with every decision, you can tell that the show is made with actual care and attention to detail, and this episode did a great job of not pushing things
too far into absurdity.
I remember when Lower Decks started and being highly underwhelmed with the first few episodes. The frenetic joke-telling and constant references (both of which have been acknowledged in both Lower Decks itself and this episode) were not really my thing, but even though I haven't watched every episode of Lower Decks, I have caught enough of it up to this point that I know it has found its groove and become much better than I had any hope for it to be from those early first impressions.
The obvious episode to compare with is
Trials and Tribble-ations, and while I wouldn't put it quite at that level, I still thought this was really good.
From the animated intro sequence to seeing Boimler and Mariner in live action and how perfect it was, this was just a fun ride. The total fanboying of Boimler was a surprisingly vicarious experience, and it was hard not to smile a lot for the entire runtime.
I mention a lot that I don't like established lore being changed, so I have to give props to how they have dealt with Spock juggling his Vulcan and human sides in the show and how that ties into the early incarnations of Spock we see in TOS. This ADDS to established lore and gives us a reason for something most fans have just handwaived away as them figuring the character out. Having an in-universe explanation is just neat. Spock being half-human was sparsely explored, and I never felt that it had that much bearing on the character, so I really like how we see that this was something that wasn't always the case. Very well done.
I thought the episode balanced the silliness well, something I also gave props to doing in Charades. Lower Decks and SNW are obviously miles apart in tone, and it could have been a mess, but it was handled well, and all the humor landed for me. Shout out to Frakes for directing as well.
I'm really enjoying this season. We need more than 10 episodes.
Two thumbs up.