169 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
169 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
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WARNING: The following article, not surprisingly, has spoilers for this week's
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TNG episode, "Devil's Due". (Gee...is that why it's got Spoiler in the subject
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line? Nah...:-) ) So, be careful.
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If you have to make a choice between this and something else (like picking your
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toenails), I'd go with the "something else", folks.
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Yep. It was pretty lousy. Not quite on the level of "The Royale", but it
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just _might_ beat out "Menage a Troi" for second-worst show. Anyway, here's
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a synop before I start frothing in a major way :-) :
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The Enterprise rushes to Ventax 2 after Dr. Howard Clarke, head of a science
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station there, reports that the station is under attack by panicking
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Ventaxians. As they reach the planet, however, the mob breaks in. The
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Enterprise crew manages to beam up Clarke, but only Clarke. He tells Picard
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that the Ventaxians are panicking because the next day, they expect the
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mythical "Ardra" (the devil, more or less) to arrive and claim their world.
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After communications are reestablished, Picard beams down to talk to Jared,
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the Ventaxians' leader. However, he, like the others, firmly believes in the
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contract their ancestors made with Ardra (a thousand years of peace and
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prosperity in exchange for their servitude thereafter), and expects her to
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come. Their conversation is interrupted, however, by an earthquake (one of
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the prophesied signs of Ardra's return), and Ardra's arrival.
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When asked who she is (by one of the Enterprise crew), a very cocky Ardra
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claims to have many names, including that of "Fecklar", the Klingon version of
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the devil. Picard, however, is skeptical to say the least, and asks that Data
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be allowed to inspect the ancient scrolls on which the contract was made. A
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short time later, in conference, Picard says that he's convinced Ardra is a
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simple magician, using Ventax for her own ends. As they return to the bridge,
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however, she's there. After taunting them all for a short time, she claims
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that her rights to the planet include anything in orbit about Ventax at the
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time of her arrival--namely, the Enterprise and crew.
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Later, Picard orders Data to look through the scrolls again, and search
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Ventaxian law for any possible loopholes. Then, later that night, a sleeping
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Picard is awakened by a seductive Ardra. He rejects her offers, however, and
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she angrily transports him down to the planet. When Data comes to get him in a
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shuttle (transporters are being blocked), they see the Enterprise literally
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disappear in front of them.
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Back on Ventax, Geordi and Dr. Clarke tell Picard that with a few more of
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Ardra's tricks, they might be able to pinpoint her power source. When Ardra
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arrives again to gloat, Picard demands arbitration, according to ancient
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Ventaxian precedent. She agrees, but only on the terms that if Picard loses,
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she wins his soul. Picard agrees, and they settle on Data as arbitrator.
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Initially, the session does not go well. Ardra "proves" her identity to the
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court, and shows off her powers to convince Picard that she is who she says she
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is. Before long, though, Geordi shows up and tells Picard privately that
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they've discovered her power source: a cloaked ship. Picard, thinking fast,
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stages a scene in the courtroom where he "steals" Ardra's abilities, and
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explains both to Data and Jared that an Enterprise team has commandeered
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Ardra's ship--and the crew have confessed that Ardra is a crook. The contract
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is abolished, and Ardra is taken away by Ventaxian authorities.
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There...that ought to do it. Now, for some comments.
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Ugh. This episode was a holdover from the nonexistent "Star Trek II" series,
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much as "The Child" was--and it shows, far more so than "The Child" did, in
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my opinion. It was screaming out as something being written for Kirk in
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Picard's place, Spock in Data's, and Ilia (of all people) in Troi's. Now,
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that in itself is not necessarily horrible; TOS had a fair number of good
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episodes. But this felt as though it had been written by someone who only
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understood the pure _stereotypes_ of the characters, and not the times said
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stereotypes were broken. Definitely not a good thing.
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The show also suffered by trying to emulate some of its far, FAR better
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predecessors, but only getting the surface down right. As "The Defector"
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did last season, "Devil's Due" opens with Data acting on the holodeck--this
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time, playing Ebenezer Scrooge confronting Marley's ghost. (And, although
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Picard again shows up watching, Patrick Stewart is definitely NOT in this
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scene incognito, in case you were wondering. :-) ) Now, Brent does a
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reasonably good Scrooge, but this failed for me on more than one level.
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First, it suffered by the mischance that I saw Patrick Stewart give a one-
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man reading of "A Christmas Carol" back in mid-December, and there's virtually
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no way that little scene could measure up. That one wasn't really their
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fault. Second, however, whoever decided to insert that scene (clearly, THAT
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one wasn't in the initial Kirkian script) seems to have missed the reason that
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the "Henry V" scene in "The Defector" DID work so well. In "The Defector",
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the entire episode had subtle overtones of Henry's predicament the whole time,
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which were occasionally brought to the forefront. Here, however, the analogy
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was flawed from the start. Picard mentions that much as the spirits scared
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Scrooge into reforming, so the Ardra of a thousand years earlier may have done,
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and that's fine--but it has little bearing on the story _at hand_. The story
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at hand was about outwitting a con artist, little more--and a scene from "A
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Christmas Carol" was very out of place.
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The other failed parallelism was with "The Measure of a Man", though this one
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is less clear. Again, we see a courtroom, with an Enterprise crewmember's fate
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at stake, and a second crewmember put in an uncomfortable situation (in this
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case, Data as the judge). This occasionally had a chance of
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working--certainly, I enjoyed Picard's questioning of Jared, where he points
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out that it sounds like Ardra had _nothing_ to do with the planet's reformation
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of centuries ago. But something about it just felt wrong to me. I wasn't
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convinced of its necessity or its credibility--and that's a big problem.
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Besides, there was also far too big a tendency for the proceedings to get very,
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very hokey--"The advocate will refrain from making the other advocate
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disappear", indeed. Sheesh.
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Let's see...on to acting and characterization. Neither is worthy of much note,
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unfortunately. The only guest star who I thought did even a half-decent job
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was Paul Lambert as Dr. Clarke. Jared was a total nonentity, and Ardra just
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seemed like a complete joke. Actually, come to think about it, I think that
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was the main problem with the episode--we were meant, I think, to take it
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fairly seriously; after all, there was the disappearance of the Enterprise and
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the possibility of being forced to live under Ardra's...er...thumb. But I
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couldn't bring myself to believe in ANY sort of threat--and neither, it felt,
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could any of the regulars.
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Which brings me to said regular cast. Man, oh man--it's rare that I speak ill
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of Patrick Stewart's performance, but for most of this week's show I feel
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completely free to do so. He must have been asleep or something. He had a few
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moments, granted--the aforementioned courtroom scenes in the last act, for
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example. But in a few cases, ESPECIALLY the scene where he's discussing the
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"con game" with Data, I got the feeling that I was hearing someone try to
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imitate Patrick Stewart's mode of speech, and not Stewart himself speaking.
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Bleah. As for the other regulars--well, we didn't see much of Riker, Troi, or
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Bev. LeVar Burton was pretty good, but we only saw him for a couple of
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minutes. Spiner was reasonably good everywhere _except_ the courtroom scenes--
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and y'know, if Spiner and Stewart had just given good performances in the same
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scenes, it would've helped a lot--and Worf seemed pretty out of character.
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("But what about her powers?"--bah.) The only real non-courtroom bright scene
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was a brief exchange in the conference room, where they're discussing the
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possibility that Ardra might be from the Q-Continuum, or Q "himself". ("No--
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Q would have no need for contracts." I like it. :-) ) All in all, a massive
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disappointment.
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Even the technical aspect wasn't so good. The earthquakes looked awful, I
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thought--just shaking the camera doesn't cut it with me. There were a few good
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displays down where Geordi and Clarke were working, and the matte of the
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Ventaxian city was pretty good (they just used it too damn much), and Ventax
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itself was a fairly pretty planet. But none of them were particularly
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inspired. In fact, I think the best-_looking_ scene was the shield effect in
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the preview for "Clues". Again, not a good sign at all.
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Well, I think that's about all I had to say. As I said, there were a few
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bright spots--a couple of the courtroom scenes, and a scene or two on the
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Enterprise. But all in all, this really should never have been made, I think.
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And it's definitely not a good way to end the season's first half. Bleah.
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The numbers:
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Plot: 2. Loathsome.
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Plot Handling: 1. If they'd played it completely straight, or gone for
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complete ludicrousness (ludicrosity? :-) ), it might've worked--but
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this was a mishmash.
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Characterization: 2. Even Stewart was disappointing.
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Technical: 4. Not awful, but very uninspired.
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TOTAL: 9/4 ---> 2. Yep--I think that's the worst of everything bar "The
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Royale". It's easily the worst of this season. Bleah. I feel unclean.
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NEXT WEEK:
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A mysterious accident that only Data can unravel--and he's not being very
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helpful. This might be interesting--the preview didn't say much. (Worf gets
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to get beat up again, though--and you'll *never* guess by whom...)
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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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2/7/91: 21 years and still going strong...
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--
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Copyright 1991, Timothy W. Lynch. All rights reserved, but feel free to ask...
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