Star Trek Discovery Season 4 Episode 8
It’s been a month since Star Trek: Discovery has been on our screens, so you’d be forgiven for hoping that the series’ return from its midseason break might at last offer up some answers about the big Season 4 mystery surrounding the Dark Matter Anomaly and the mysterious Species 10-C that created it. Or at least move Season 4’s overall plot along a bit more deliberately than this particular hour manages to do. Instead, “All In” is a decent enough hour in a world where we haven’t had a new episode in several weeks, but one that’s more focused on Michael and Book’s relationship and whether it will be able to survive his decision to embrace Ruon Tarka’s plan to destroy the DMA. The last-minute revelation that Species 10-C is some sort of highly evolved race with dangerously advanced technological capabilities that are using the DMA to dredge for the tiny energy-rich elements needed to power its vast Faraday cage-style space dome is intriguing. (And lends credence to the Federation’s fear that attempting to destroy the DMA–and thereby damage Species 10-C’s power supply—could lead to a war no one wants or is ready to fight.) But it all feels a bit tacked on to the rest of the hour, and one can only hope we’ll get to delve into all this in a more substantive way during next week’s installment. In all honesty, a lot of “All In” feels as though it’s made of moments that might have been better served in different episodes: Hugh Culber’s stress breakdown that gets just a single scene to play out, Michael’s sudden interest in Owo’s mental state even though the two have barely spoken this season, and the revelation of the lieutenant commander’s apparent cage-fighting skills, just for a start. Yet, the hour’s criminal underworld setting and vague heist vibes are a welcome reprieve from the recent run of Discovery episodes that have largely tended to involve people arguing around a Federation Headquarters’ desk as much as I have enjoyed the depth of their conversations. (Speaking of which, are we just…never seeing Tilly again? Even though Discovery is constantly at what is essentially home base?) I keep thinking that at some point, I’m going to get over how annoying it is that Michael has bent and broken the rules so often that it’s now not only expected of her but behavior that is actively encouraged, and yet. Here I am! To be fair, Season 4 has been remarkably good at delineating the differences between Michael Burnham, Starfleet officer, and Michael Burnham, Starfleet captain, and what her change in station has meant for the way she’s had to approach problems and manage competing loyalties. But so much of this episode feels like backsliding on that front, and suddenly we’re right back to Michael doing things she shouldn’t and getting rewarded for them in the end. Even her admission at the end of the hour that she’ll have to do whatever’s necessary to stop Book and Tarka from destroying the DMA rings more hollow than it would have before this episode when it at least felt like Discovery was trying to attach real stakes and weight and even some level of accountability to Michael’s decisions as captain. (At last!) But now—Does anyone really think she’d kill Book to avert a war rather than come up with an insane scheme to stop him that eventually, Rillak will somehow have to dub brilliant? Don’t get me wrong, I don’t want anything to happen to Book (David Ajala remains my Season 4 MVP), but please let there at least be some real consequences attached to whatever Michael’s about to do to save him. Even if those consequences come from Book in some way. One of the best elements about this episode, though, is the way it calls back, both in setting and tone, to Michael and Book’s first adventures together when she came to the 32nd century. It’s easy to forget that the two of them spent a year together as couriers when Michael thought she’d lost her Starfleet life forever, working with shady types and transporting illicit materials all over the galaxy. The ease with which they slip back into that partnership, from their awkwardly fake banter to the clear hand singles they use with one another, is a strangely welcome and necessary reminder of how good they really are together, something that has been (rightfully I think) overshadowed by Book’s grief over Kwaijon. Which, of course, comes at the precise moment where their future together seems more clouded and uncertain than ever. As is typical of the mature way Discovery has always written the romance between these two, the ultimate fate of Book and Burnham’s relationship has little to do with how much they love one another. Instead, it’s about whether they’ll be able to successfully navigate what appear to be rather significant differences in moral philosophy. Book is willing to risk it all to prevent other races from feeling the loss he now struggles with every day and embraces an end justify the means attitude toward protecting those lives.