16

WARNING: This thread WILL contain unhidden spoilers for this episode and every episode before it. You are allowed to talk about future episodes of the series, but put ANY information that comes after this episode behind spoiler tags.

The Orville season 3 "New Horizons", episode 9 "Domino"

Written by Brannon Braga & Andre Bormanis, directed by Jon Cassar.

"But the one thing you can say for democracy is that all other forms of government are even worse."

Ensign Burke and Isaac successfully develop and deploy a weapon that can target and effortlessly destroy the Kaylon. While the Union debates the moral implications of such a weapon, the threat of its existence is used to force a ceasefire with the Kaylons. When everyone finally feels like they can breathe a sigh of relief, the weapon is stolen out from under lock and key and given to a newly-formed Krill-Moclan alliance. Now the Orville and the entire Planetary Union races to stop them from using the weapon on a terrifying scale and save the very species that threatened to exterminate all life in the galaxy.

Originally released: 28 July 2022

Check here to find out where you can stream or digitally purchase The Orville in your country.

What did you think?

top 1 comments
sorted by: hot top new old
[-] aeronmelon@lemmy.world 3 points 1 month ago

My review from when the episode first aired:

On any other series, that would have been the season finale. Ten years ago, it would have been considered a TV movie.

Not just on terms of length, because it wasn't even the longest episode of the season thus far, but on terms of stakes and delivery. They pulled out all the stops, showed us all the things, culminated everything that the season has been building up to... save for one small child.

Where all the other episodes (except for one unfortunate bummer) pulled at the heart strings and brought progressive thought and understanding in the way Trek fans had enjoyed for years, this episode was one bombastic, cinematic moment after another. And I can appreciate that, when employed correctly. So many TV shows (and movies) don't, and all the explosions and dying and interstellar war fail to mean anything. Despite this, there was a single thought-provoking plot thread that came to a close...

Ensign Charly Burke.

I understand, and sympathize, with a lot of the hate surrounding the character. Though, I'm glad that the vast majority of that hate was aimed at the character and not the actor. Orville fans setting the bar for more established fandoms. And I personally wish they could have fleshed her out more than they did. But in the end... they did a good job with her arc. She was ripped out of her happy little life, forced to work alongside the person who inadvertently caused the person she loved to die for no reason, forced to tow the line on a ship that wouldn't tolerate racism towards the enemy the way the rest of the Union might have (wrongly) put up with. And she grew. Against her desire to grow, she grew. She grew more than she was aware of. When she had no time to think, she reactively defended Issac and ultimately the Kaylon as a people. So, I don't hate Charly as a character - especially not now. I think it was a competent execution of a trope that is used far too often and falls flat almost all of the time. Hell, even the funeral felt earned.

The rest of the episode is so dense, and doesn't ever slow down. But it's also a very visual. surface-level affair compared to the rest, so I'll just say that it was general sci-fi excellence. A great dessert after an even greater meal. I was genuinely shocked by Admiral Perry, especially his awareness of his decisions (Somewhere between Lawful Neutral and True Neutral). It's a shame he's gone now, but I'm more surprised we got Ted Danson in a recurring role for two seasons. I knew that a major shift in power was coming because of the last episode, but I was not expecting the team-ups we are left with. After all the griping about the shorten ed episode list, the length of those episodes and how tight the narrative has been leaves me stunned there's still a whole other episode to go after all of this. See you on the other side.

The episode looks as flawless as it did three years ago. All the pew-pew-pews were definitely earned after such a blockbuster season.

The funeral still hurts, apart from MacFarlane trying really hard to match Shatner's speaking tempo. :) It's such a masterclass in how to write actual character growth, why does this show have to continue to be such an anomaly in the sea of modern science fiction?

this post was submitted on 05 Jan 2026
16 points (100.0% liked)

Seth MacFarlane's The Orville

431 readers
1 users here now

Welcome aboard. For security reasons, we need you to pee in this cup.

The Orville is a satirical science fiction drama created by Seth MacFarlane and modeled after classic episodic Star Trek with a modern flair.

Allies of the Planetary Union:

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS