umult and Smoke: A Space Pirate Reviews 'The Cardinal Knot'
A space pirate touches down in the Central Conclave to review the holovid 'The Cardinal Knot'-a film that looks like a hundred archivists in techno-garb but feels like waiting for a postponed skirmish. Read on for a brutally honest take from your seasoned plunderer.
Stardate 4422.196. Before my magnetic boots touched the mosaic floor of the Central Conclave, my cyber-eye was already struggling to decode the Synodal Rotunda’s ticketing system: a dead-end spiral, much like the holovid 'The Cardinal Knot', which I watched on a luminous archive display. The film starts off with plenty of noise-endless processions of holographic cardinals, stately process marches through archival mist, and spectacular showers of digital laws. For a pirate like me, fond of chaos, that was amusing. The backdrop pops with visual excess, just like the ceremonial key-twirling in the fountain halls.
Unfortunately, the viewing experience quickly deteriorates into ceremonial lethargy. The plot-a relic trader who unwittingly triggers the Collective Jurisdiction-deflates like a punctured space balloon under the endless repetition of tribunal hearings and council bickering. The performers oscillate between bureaucratic bewilderment and booming techno-theater, as if unsure whether to decide or wait for a deferred decision. Only a handful of scenes truly spark: a brief duel between a telepathic pigeon and a beleaguered scribe, or the moment the Synodal database nearly crashes from a premature canonization.
I’ll admit, in fairness, the visuals of 'The Cardinal Knot' are damn slick. But beauty alone doesn’t save a spaceship when the helm is missing. After two hours of procedural dawdling without a shred of plunder or resolution, I found myself wondering if even the ruins outside the Conclave showed more resolve.