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(Spoilers!) Deconstructing Lorca

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Captain Gabriel Lorca – make that Mirror Lorca – died a brutal death in “What’s Past Is Prologue.” Emperor Georgiou, herself a Mirror Universe figure, ran her sword straight through his body and then jettisoned him off her ship. Few fans saw it all coming: the Lorca reveal or the character’s demise. Many viewers focused so intently on the Voq/Tyler intrigue that they missed/ignored the Mirror Lorca teases. And some people just took Lorca’s presence for granted. Jason Isaacs, one of the main stars and among the most-recognizable names on Star Trek: Discovery, they wouldn’t dare make him the Big Bad or kill him off, right?

Well…

Today, StarTrek.com takes a few moments to deconstruct Lorca, to break down some of the hints – be they specific shots or lines of dialogue – that set the stage for the identity shocker.

That First Encounter

Captain Lorca and Michael Burnham

Lorca and Burnham first meet in “Context Is for Kings,” with prisoner Burnham stepping into the captain’s ready room. A monitor reveals the Klingons controlling a lot of territory. The room is dark. “No matter how deep you are in space,” he says, staring out the window, “you almost feel like you see home, don’t you think? Maybe it’s just me.” He chalks up the light aversion to a recent battle injury. “I like to think it makes me mysterious,” he says. Lorca then offers a reluctant Burnham a second chance, a shot at winning the war and sending everyone home. Later, Lorca introduces Burnham to the Mycelium spores, which he considers the secret to defeating the Klingons.

Further, Lorca baits the hook to enlist his mutineer by appealing to Burnham’s deepest desires: atonement, redemption, the chance to right wrongs and save lives, an assurance that Captain Georgiou didn’t die in vain. Burnham started the war, Lorca reasons, and this is her chance to end it. Other noteworthy points: Where did Lorca get those skeletons, particularly the Gorn? And, Lorca is shockingly militaristic, even nihilistic, for a Starfleet captain. Fans noticed, arguing that he wasn’t proper Starfleet. Those fans… were right, only not quite in the way they assumed. The combination of Lorca captaining the Discovery, commandeering Burnham, flouting Starfleet regulations, etc., makes sense… in hindsight. Bonus hints: Lorca spent much of the season, as noted, in risk-taking, man-of-action, militaristic mode, but he occasionally betrayed flashes of warmth, humanity, reason and humor, likely just to cover his tracks and keep the crew on his side.


Man, He’s Into Her

Tyler and Burnham

Over and over again throughout the first 12 episodes, Lorca seeks to protect Burnham. He withholds her from assignments and demands that Tyler bring “her” back in one piece. Tyler – whom Lorca shockingly chose to trust; by the way, did he know Tyler was Voq? -- understandably assumes the captain means the shuttle, but Lorca makes it clear he’s referring to Burnham. Much later, when the jig was up, Lorca chooses not to hurt Burnham as they fight in “What’s Past Is Prologue.” We ultimately learn that Emperor Georgiou lost her “daughter” to Lorca. He eventually lost her, too, and now he wants her back… by his side, to rule the universe. Can he tap into “our” Burnham’s inner darkness? Bonus hint: as revealed on After Trek, Mirror Lorca eats a meal in “our” universe that resembles one that Burnham receives in the Mirror Universe.


Cornwell, Cornwell, Cornwell

Admiral Cornwell

Admiral Cornwell and Lorca share a past, but Lorca barely acknowledges it, beyond the sex. He flat-out forgets specifics of their relationship and interactions. We know why now, but in the moment, it concerns Cornwell gravely, not because she fears he’s from the Mirror Universe, but since it speaks to his having returned to command too soon following the Buran incident. Bonus hints: the agonizer scars on his back, Cornwell’s very telling “You’re not the man I knew” line, uttered right to his face, and his indifference to her apparent death.


The Stamets Factor

Dr. Culber, Paul Stamets and Captain Lorca

Paul Stamets is both Lorca’s way home and his secret for beating the Klingons. Just as he manipulates Burnham, preying on her desires/fears, and just as he used the Tardigrade, pushing the creature to its limits, Lorca does the same with Stamets, using flattery, cajoling, and even challenging the lieutenant’s abilities as a scientist. “We have to win this war,” Lorca says, evoking near-instant support from Stamets, who overcomes his doubts and says, “One hundred, thirty-three jumps, it is.” Bonus hint: we get glimpses of Lorca sidestepping conversations about how they got where they are.”

Captain Lorca, Paul Stamets and Dr. Culber

More bonus hints: Lorca seems unconcerned about Stamets’ fate and, more than once, appears to impede efforts to help him. He evinces genuine concern, though, when Stamets declares he’ll make one more jump, and only one more jump. Also, who’s the first to comment that Discovery landed in the Mirror Universe? Yup… Lorca. He knows it – and planned it. The most damning evidence: his tampering, in “Into the Forest I Go,” with navigation control, hurtling the ship into, not a specific mark, but the “unknown.” And there’s more: What’s with all the data he’s collecting? What does he know about the Defiant that he’s not sharing? Lorca is almost too relaxed in the Mirror Universe (nice leather, captain) and in no rush to get home. “Now, what we need to do is understand where we are and how to survive," he says (in “The Wolf Inside”). "And then we'll find a way home."


The Emperor’s Folly

Emperor Georgiou & Michael Burnham

The pieces fall into place for Burnham aboard the Charon. Mirror Lorca was once Emperor Georgiou’s right hand, but with Mirror Burnham as his partner, they sought to topple the emperor. And, remember, Burnham doesn’t realize that Lorca is Mirror Lorca until she’s brought him on board the Charon, which was Mirror Lorca’s intention the entire time. Well played, sir. “He needed me to get onto this ship,” Burnham says aloud to Emperor Georgiou. “You wouldn’t have let him on otherwise. He needed me to get to you. None of this was an accident. My so-called captain’s not from my universe. He’s from… yours.”

Gabriel Lorca

So, did when did YOU catch on to the Mirror Lorca’s secret? And what other hints/clues did you notice, either at the time or in looking back? Let us know in the comments section below.

Star Trek: Discovery airs Sunday nights on CBS All Access in the U.S. and Space Channel in Canada. The series airs on Mondays on Netflix in the rest of the world.

Star Trek Discovery CBS All Access

Star Trek Discovery Space Channel CraveTV

Star Trek Discovery Netflix



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