If Memory Serves, I first suggested who the Red Angel could be last week, now I’m pretty sure I know.

*SPOILERS*

It’s a cute touch with If Memory Serves’ ‘Previously On…’ recap which takes us back to the pilot and delivers the ultimate Trek re-cap from the very beginning. But before we get too nostalgic, we cut to our modern Pike and it’s impressive just how un-jarring the transition is. Anson Mount really is doing terrific work this season, honouring and expanding what Jeffrey Hunter did with Christopher Pike all those years ago.

And its mere moments before “Star Trek: Discovery” shows just how far we’ve trekked through those stars as it brings Spock and Burnham to Talos IV with some effects work that’s literally interstellar.

The sixties call back is appropriate for If Memory Serves, an episode which is focussed on multiple trips down memory lane. Although not strictly necessary, the inclusions of the Talosians as the means of curing Spock’s mental fugue is a nice touch and their updated look works well, even if the surface of Talos does end up looking like an Instagram-filtered quarry and somehow feels cheaper than the studio set of “The Cage” five decades before it. It’s nice, though, to see Vina for a third time, creating a kind of Talosian trilogy; a Menagerie à trois.

Meanwhile, onboard Discovery Section 31 has arranged for the crew to be given the thankless task of scanning the area of temporal anomaly for traces of the destroyed probe, but when Saru discovers evidence of a saboteur onboard, Pike’s suspicions naturally turn to Tyler. But Pike’s not the only one who’s focussing on the ex-Voq: Culber’s nursing plans to start his own Netflix Original Documentary Series: “Meeting Your Murderer”.

Once again, Burnham’s terrible secret is at risk of being revealed, the Talosians demanding the memory of it as payment for unscrambling Spock’s psyche for…some reason. After all the build-up, it ends up being incredibly disappointing to discover that Burnham’s heinous act is literally nothing that any pair of siblings would have said and done a dozen times over and barely registers on the scale used to measure some of the stuff his lifelong friend McCoy would say to him across the years. It’s such a misguidedly woke reading of the character that such an exchange would end up being so unforgivable and unspeakable, speaking to a lack of understanding of the character’s long and storied development.

Speaking of disregarding firmly established parameters, it’s utterly ridiculous that Culber and Tyler would be allowed to interact without supervision at all and the idea that the ship’s First Officer would willingly allow a fist fight to take place and actively prevent others from intervening is beyond ludicrous. Saru may rationalise it later, but on any other ship in any other series all three of them would be in the brig and facing court-martial charges. Interesting to see Discovery has drone janitors, presumably used by the episode’s director, T J Scott, to get some of his distractingly dizzying and occasionally archly remote shots he peppers the episode with.

Since his ganglia dropped, Saru jdgaf anymore and it seems to be catching. There’s no denying Saru’s becoming a more fun and interesting character by the week but he’s also on a disturbing trajectory and it foreshadows the distinct possibility that the suddenly ‘mature’ Kelpian race could become villains of the series having had their true predator natures liberated by Saru’s puberty bomb.

In return for learning that Burnham once used ethnic slurs to prevent Spock from accompanying her on a cry for attention, we discover that the Red Angel’s first ever act was to save Burnham. Of course it was, because I’m now absolutely convinced that Burnham will end up becoming the Red Angel, wrapping up season 2 in a near predestination paradox and ensuring that it’s all about Michael once again.

The two storylines finally come together when the Talosians take a leaf from “The Last Jedi” playbook and force-Skype the Discovery allowing Burnham to tell Pike the truth of Section 31’s actions and give them their location. It certainly doesn’t help Tyler’s standing with Pike and when an attempt to make a spore jump to Talos IV is thwarted by sabotage, there’s nobody else to point the finger at, especially when Hercule Saru’s little grey cells discover secret transmissions made using Tyler’s command codes. Of course, for the viewer, it’s tremendous fun watching Saru and Pike conduct a drumhead trial of Tyler while Airiam is in the background, merrily fucking shit up.

There’s a clunkiness to the writing and structure of the episode that recalls the missteps of last season and while they seem to have lost the magic touch of juggling competing storylines but damn if it doesn’t have a lightness of touch and sense of fun this time around, meaning although it’s much less cohesive than it used to be, it’s just as enjoyable. If Memory Serves’ dénouement brings a touch of the old wild west ‘wagon train to the stars’ feel as the captain and crew decide to ignore their orders and go on the run, which seems fittingly Roddenberrian for an episode which called back to the very beginnings of the franchise.

star trek discovery s2e08 if memory serves

Season 2 Episode 08

star trek discovery season 2
Star Trek Score 7


Hi there! If you enjoyed this post, why not sign up to get new posts sent straight to your inbox?

Sign up to receive a weekly digest of The Craggus' latest posts.

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

star trek discovery s1e01 the vulcan hello
star trek discovery s1e02 battle at the binary stars
star trek discovery s1e03 context is for kings
star trek discovery s1e04 the butcher's knife cares not for the lamb's cry
star trek discovery s1e05 choose your pain
star trek discovery s1e06 lethe
star trek discovery s1e07 magic to make the sanest man go mad
star trek discovery s1e08 si vis pacem, para bellum
star trek discovery s1e09 into the forest i go
star trek discovery s1e10 despite yourself
star trek discovery s1e11 the wolf inside
star trek discovery s1e12 vaulting ambition
star trek discovery s1e13 what's past is prologue
star trek discovery s1e14 the war without the war within
star trek discovery s1e15 will you take my hand?
star trek discovery s2e01 brother
star trek discovery s2e02 new eden
star trek discovery s1e03 point of light
star trek discovery s2e04 an obol for charon
star trek discovery s2e05 saints of imperfection
star trek discovery s2e06 the sound of thunder
star trek discovery s2e07 light and shadows
star trek discovery s2e09 project daedalus
star trek discovery s2e10 the red angel
star trek discovery s2e11 perpetual infinity
star trek discovery s2e12 through the valley of shadows
star trek discovery s2e13 such sweet sorrow
star trek discovery s2e14 such sweet sorrow part ii
star trek discovery s3e01 that hope is you part 1
star trek discovery s3e02 far from home
star trek discovery s3e03 people of earth
star trek discovery s3e04 forget me not
star trek discovery s3e05 die trying
star trek discovery s3e06 scavengers
star trek discovery s3e07 unification iii
star trek discovery s3e08 the sanctuary
star trek discovery s3e09 terra firma part 1
star trek discovery s3e10 terra firma part 2
star trek discovery s3e11 su'kal
star trek discovery s3e12 there is a tide...
star trek discovery s3e13 that hope is you part 2
logo

Related posts

The Ministry Of Ungentlemanly Warfare (2024) Review

The Ministry Of Ungentlemanly Warfare (2024) Review

Guy Ritiche assembled a dirty dozen action movie homages to staff up The Ministry Of Ungentlemanly Warfare It's said that time heals all wounds, but there are some wounds that cinema can't help picking at, and the Second World War is one of the biggest. And who can blame Hollywood...

Le Mans ’66 (2019) Review

Le Mans '66 (2019) Review

Le Mans '66 will get your motor running. Based on an incredible true story and bringing one of motor racing’s unsung heroes to due prominence, “Le Mans ‘66” (or, if you prefer – as many seem to – “Ford v Ferrari”) tells the fascinating story of how consumer motor giant Ford took on...

Bad Boys For Life (2020) Review

Bad Boys For Life (2020) Review

Smith and Lawrence roll back the years, if not the mileage in Bad Boys For Life Having spent a decade (and the best part of a billion dollars) smashing whirling dervishes of tinfoil and glass against each other in the “Transformers” franchise, it's easy to forget that Michael Bay’s...

Die Hard (1988) Review

Die Hard (1988) Review

Willis and Rickman headline a Christmas? classic. Few films have left a mark on the action genre - or annual internet discourse - as indelibly as Die Hard. Released in 1988, John McTiernan’s high-octane thriller redefined the blueprint for action cinema with its blend of tight pacing...

Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation (2015) Review

Mission: Impossible - Rogue Nation (2015) Review

Despite Cruise's efforts to hog the limelight, it's Rebecca Ferguson who rules Mission: Impossible - Rogue Nation Back for a fifth instalment, “Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation” finds Ethan Hunt facing off against two distinct threats. One is The Syndicate, a shadow network which...

Cold Pursuit (2019) Review

Cold Pursuit (2019) Review

Cold Pursuit isn't worth following Hardly the frozen “Taken” we were promised by the marketing, "Cold Pursuit" is a remake of the director’s own 2014 film "Kraftidioten" and has moments of sublime black humour but is too disjointed, derivative and haphazard to do justice to its cast or...