146 lines
8.0 KiB
Plaintext
146 lines
8.0 KiB
Plaintext
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WARNING: This post contains spoiler information concerning this week's TNG
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episode, "The Most Toys". Accidental viewers, be wary.
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Oh, boy.
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This one's going to be REALLY tough to tackle.
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You'll see why in a bit, after the synopsis. This part, at least, should be
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easy -- maybe easier than usual. Here goes:
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PLOT ONE: (Yes, there are two.) Data, about to start his third and final
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shuttle trip back from the Jovis to the Enterprise to deliver some
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hytrititum, is captured by the trader Kivas Fajo. Fajo prides himself on
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being a collector of rare and unusual artifacts. Amongst his collection are:
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the sole surviving member of a species long thought extinct, the only known
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copy of Roger Maris's 1962 baseball card, the Mona Lisa -- and now Data.
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Fajo slowly but surely tries to warp Data to his way of operating. He wants
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Data to wear something other than his uniform, so he dissolves the uniform in
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seconds. He wants Data to "sit in the chair" and be a good little toy, so he
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threatens his assistant of 14 years, Varria, with a prototype disruptor that
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is banned in the Federation because it's just TOO nasty. He attacks the
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paradox of Data being a "military pacifist", and claims to be Data's
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liberator. Data tries various forms of escape, but to no avail.
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Until, enough is enough. Varria, after being threatened so casually with the
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disruptor, decides that she must escape, and she wants Data with her for
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protection. They make it out to the shuttle bay, but then Varria is killed
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(by a second disruptor) by Fajo. Data threatens Fajo with the disruptor, but
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Fajo doesn't take it seriously, knowing that Data's programmed "respect for
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all other lifeforms" won't allow Data to kill him. He keeps emphasizing
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Data's lack of emotion, and says "you're just an android". Data fires -- just
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as the Enterprise's transporter beam takes him away.
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PLOT TWO: The Enterprise, meanwhile, has been taken in by Fajo's ruse
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(namely, blowing up the shuttle Pike after removing Data from it), and
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believe Data dead. We see a great deal of reaction to the death. Geordi
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remarks, "I always thought he'd outlive us -- by centuries.", and tortures
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himself trying to figure things out. Troi is troubled by Worf replacing Data
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at Ops; after all, as she points out, "this is the second time [Worf has]
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replaced a crewmember who has died". Eventually, Geordi realizes he DID miss
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something.
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Moreover, once they reach Beta Agni II (the site of a water supply
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contamination, which was the reason they needed the hitrytium in the first
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place), they discover that the contamination was not a natural disaster. Fajo
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set it up, JUST so they'd have to come to him for hitrytium and so he could
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obtain Data. They find Fajo and beam Data back...deactivating the
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already-discharged disruptor in transit.
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The final scene has Data visiting Fajo in the brig, and informing him that
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his entire collection has been confiscated. When Fajo says, "I bet that gives
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you a lot of pleasure, doesn't it?", Data replies "no, sir...it does not!
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I do not feel pleasure. I am only an android." and walks out.
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Whew. That wasn't so bad, I guess. Now, onwards.
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When I first read about this episode, and especially when I saw the initial
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preview for it last week, I thought "ugh!! This looks awful!". I was wrong.
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While I didn't think it absolutely fantastic, it was very provocative...
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and a little disturbing.
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Before I tackle the really big issue (to wit, Data's near-killing of Kivas
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Fajo), I'll take care of some smaller issues, though.
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First, nearly all the scenes aboard the Enterprise were well handled,
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particularly those involving Geordi. Someone paid very nice attention to
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detail when Geordi and Wes went into Data's quarters, as they found: the SAME
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painting shown in "Tin Man" (and which I think is a painting of the creature
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from "Time Squared"), the literary gift from Picard, the medals, a few decks
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of cards ("Data always did fall for Riker's bluffs," Geordi says), and the
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holo-image of Tasha. Geordi's reactions are exactly what I would have
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expected from him.
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I'm a little less thrilled with the way Picard was handled in this story. He
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seemed a bit too gruff throughout most of it. I realize that as a captain,
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one cannot always allow oneself the luxury of feelings, but he seemed TOO
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cold. (This time, however, as opposed to the "Broccoli" slip in "Hollow
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Pursuits", I felt his accidental slip of the tongue in calling Worf "Mr.
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Data" at Ops was entirely justified, and entirely right.) Also, if Worf
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replacing Data was a permanent replacement, I must object to it. Doubling up
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section chiefs is a really bad move, so unless he was going to appoint
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someone else as head of Security, I can't say I agreed with it.
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Most of the time I saw Kivas Fajo, I was very unimpressed. I felt like I was
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seeing a Ferengi in human garb, and the Ferengi have very rarely managed to
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impress me in ANY way. Although he was laid out very consistently, and I
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managed to believe he could live that way, I did not enjoy watching him. (And
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before you say "but that was the point!", there's a difference between not
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liking a character but wanting to see him get his just desserts, and simply
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not wanting to watch someone.) Lastly, I thought all the little Terran
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touches to his collection were silly and pointless.
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Now, on to the crucial issue: that of Data. There's a little ambiguity in the
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show, which I ignored to a point in the above synopsis. Firstly, we don't
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actually see the weapon fire -- O'Brien just says as Data is in transport
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that the weapon is in a state of discharge. Data, upon his arrival, says
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"perhaps something happened during the transport". I ignored that slight
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ambiguity because I believe full well that he "pulled the trigger" and the
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transport beam was the only thing that saved Fajo from an exceptionally nasty
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death. (Remember, we were shown Varria being hit by it -- it's not pretty.)
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Then, there is the additional ambiguity of WHY Data fired, assuming he did.
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He states earlier, when Fajo asks, "tell me, Data, have you killed yet?",
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that "I am programmed with the ability to use deadly force in the course of
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defense." However, he is not physically threatened here. Fajo stated
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perfectly, just before Data fires, the possible reasons he could fire: rage
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over Varria's death, the desire for revenge, etc. Can Data succumb to one of
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these things?
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I'm going to take a somewhat controversial stand on this one. (I say
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"controversial" because the two people I've already mentioned it to think I'm
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out of my mind.) I submit that Data did fire the weapon, in what could almost
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be termed a "fit of passion". I submit that he has slowly been becoming more
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human, more "emotional", and he has now crossed an important line: namely, he
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has now (for all intents and purposes) killed, virtually out of malice. I
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claim that he does have emotions, his denials notwithstanding. What, I ask,
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is the difference psychologically between Data and someone who simply has
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active mental "dampers" so that telepaths cannot read his mind?
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Anyway, I expect the last few minutes of this show to spark a lot of heated
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debate. Let's just hope the heat doesn't spark any flames. At any rate,
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here's the wrap-up:
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Plot: 8.5 - The Enterprise gets a 10, but Fajo only gets a 7 (occasionally,
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'twas a bit too predictable).
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Plot Handling: 9 - Fajo took enough precautions to make the Enterprise's
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acceptance of Data's "death" convincing.
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Characterization: 8 - Spectacular Data and Geordi, and pretty good on
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everyone else, but a bit off for Picard's
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uncharacteristic gruffness.
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Technical: 10 - Very internally consistent scientifically, and no particular
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gaffes elsewhere.
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TOTAL: 35.5/4 = 9. Much better than I expected.
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Tim Lynch (Cornell's first Astronomy B.A.; one of many Caltech grad students)
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BITNET: tlynch@citjuliet
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INTERNET: tlynch@juliet.caltech.edu
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UUCP: ...!ucbvax!tlynch%juliet.caltech.edu@hamlet.caltech.edu
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"His rewards for loyalty are _lavish_, and his punishments for disloyalty are
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equally . . . lavish."
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--Varria, speaking about Fajo.
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--
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Copyright 1990, Timothy W. Lynch. All rights reserved, but feel free to ask...
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