Star Trek Retro Review 'Hard Time' - An Emotional Gut Punch

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We are back with another Star Trek Retro Review. This time we are taking our talents to the promenade to talk about Star Trek Deep Space Nine's 'Hard Time'. This episode is focused on Miles O'Brien, the lovable chief in what can only be described as an emotional gut punch. The episode doesn't hold back, giving one of the most unsettling, emotional and heaviest episodes of Star Trek maybe ever. This is a wonderful episode, built up by excellent writing and some groundbreaking performances.
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Пікірлер: 29

  • @NaterTot
    @NaterTot9 ай бұрын

    Hey Tots. We are back with another Retro Review. 'Hard Time' was a hard time to get through. As someone who has lost someone to suicide, this conversation is delicate and obviously extremely nuanced. I did my best to not put too many jokes in this (and some of the more serious conversation was dialed back to suit KZread's stringent needs). Regardless, this episode was wonderfully done, boasted by a WONDERFUL performance from Colm Meaney. As stated in the review, if you or someone you know/love is going through a mental health crisis, please reach out to the hotline or a medical professional. With all the love (and starch), Mr. Tot

  • @oldman5247
    @oldman52479 ай бұрын

    If you ignore the fact that everything may not have happened. This episode was a well thought out exploration of how far humanity can be pushed into darkness. Before they start to become awful themselves along with talking about suicide and rehabilitation methods. However personally I would’ve loved this episode if everything that happened in this episode wasn’t just something that was programmed into Mile’s head.

  • @elizabethpalladino8301
    @elizabethpalladino83015 ай бұрын

    This is my favorite of the "beat up Miles O'Brien" trope.

  • @MousePounder
    @MousePounder9 ай бұрын

    Any excuse to talk about Demolition Man is a good excuse to me! 😂

  • @jeepdude7359
    @jeepdude7359Ай бұрын

    Some of the most emotional and real acting DS9 had to offer.

  • @Doctoranthetardis
    @Doctoranthetardis9 ай бұрын

    This episode lives rent free in my head. I think about it a lot more than most other episodes.

  • @NaterTot

    @NaterTot

    9 ай бұрын

    I haven’t stopped since I watched it!

  • @OrganizedChaos14
    @OrganizedChaos149 ай бұрын

    Great discussion. Makes me want to rewatch this episode, which is crazy good but also crazy brutal. Miles has it rough.

  • @oddish4352
    @oddish43529 ай бұрын

    My head canon is that Sisko sent the Defiant to this world, where they locked the phasers on the Agrathi prison complex and demanded every bit of data they had on the "correction" procedure. Thus equipped, Bashir was able to devise a treatment. It didn't erase the memories completely, but it severely blurred them, so Miles remembered them the way he would a three-day tequila bender. That is why he was able to go back to his life with his sanity intact. As for the Agrathi, they didn't learn from this; they made the mistake of doing one of their "corrections" on a visiting Klingon. This proved unwise, as the Empire was less tolerant of having its citizens abused, and most of the corrections personnel wound up impaled on bat'leths.

  • @NaterTot

    @NaterTot

    9 ай бұрын

    I love this idea.

  • @trustin.p9504
    @trustin.p95049 ай бұрын

    I am really enjoying these reviews.👍🖖

  • @NaterTot

    @NaterTot

    9 ай бұрын

    We enjoy making them! :)

  • @MousePounder
    @MousePounder9 ай бұрын

    Huge emotional gut punch episode....then the show never mentions it again...might be why it got forgotten?

  • @NaterTot

    @NaterTot

    9 ай бұрын

    This. That’s a great point. It isn’t ever mentioned again. Not that Miles should have his trauma dragged through the mud, but it’s completely forgotten about.

  • @crintondux

    @crintondux

    2 ай бұрын

    @@NaterTotit’s an interesting thought isn’t it - could you actually get over something like this? Once you come to terms with the fact it wasn’t actually real, and get back into your normal routine - would you be able to just put it behind you and move on? You haven’t actually lost 20 years of your life, you haven’t really lost anything

  • @sethmaki1333
    @sethmaki13339 ай бұрын

    I really love this episode, but I'll never be able to watch it a second time. It's joins a select few, such as Million Dollar Baby among others as something I can only watch once, but is something deserving every single award possible for its category.

  • @NaterTot

    @NaterTot

    9 ай бұрын

    I completely agree with this assessment. Not that every episode of Trek needs to be fun, but the subject matter is so heavy.

  • @RobinTimDrake
    @RobinTimDrake5 ай бұрын

    Jake retaught O'Brian because O'Brian taught him everything when Jake was given an engineering job in the earlier seasons.

  • @MousePounder
    @MousePounder9 ай бұрын

    11001001 is my episode suggestion

  • @robertcringle4865
    @robertcringle48658 ай бұрын

    One of the best DS9 episodes, great performances all around. Obrien must suffer rule in full effect.

  • @lexwritesthings
    @lexwritesthings9 ай бұрын

    O'Brien had some serious trauma. Such a good episode.

  • @NaterTot

    @NaterTot

    9 ай бұрын

    He really did. Wonderful episode that deserves more recognition

  • @adamkuch9377
    @adamkuch93779 ай бұрын

    Something occurs to me about this episode. Wouldn't a citizen of this planet know about the nature of their punishment? And that knowledge would change their experience? I'm sure it would still be traumatic, but having that knowledge means no fear of physical harm, and understanding that while hunger would be a real feeling, starvation would be impossible. One explanation is that they could tailor the experience in a way that still works as a deterent. But it's clear in the episode Miles thought the whole thing was real. I imagine this being worse because he thinks his wife and child are living years without him, and he's hoping for a rescue that will never come.

  • @RickWolfff
    @RickWolfff9 ай бұрын

    All this time I assumed Eechar was played by Leland Orser.

  • @NaterTot

    @NaterTot

    9 ай бұрын

    Honestly, looks a lot like him!

  • @MousePounder
    @MousePounder9 ай бұрын

    Would have been lifelong PTSD...would have had an early retirement

  • @NaterTot

    @NaterTot

    9 ай бұрын

    I honestly believe he would have probably had forced retirement. No way around it. I mean he wasn’t just in prison, but tortured, starved, etc. he was back at work like the next day

  • @MousePounder
    @MousePounder9 ай бұрын

    Easy A or 9.0 of an episode. Really let Colm stretch his acting legs

  • @NaterTot

    @NaterTot

    9 ай бұрын

    Yep. He went all out!

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