151 lines
8.1 KiB
Plaintext
151 lines
8.1 KiB
Plaintext
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WARNING! The following post contains spoiler information regarding this
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week's TNG episode, "The Enemy". Anyone who goes further in this
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review risks summary spoilage. Be warned.
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Honest.
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Hiya, folks. Incredible how well this season's turning out, isn't it? Well,
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this week's show was no exception. I loved it. Not quite perfect, but pretty
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damn near, despite being somewhat multi-plot. Time for a quick synopsis
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first, though.
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Plot One: An away team consisting of Riker, Worf, and Geordi is down on the
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planet of Galorndon Core, investigating a distress signal. As it turns out,
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it was from a Romulan ship. What's it doing this side of the Neutral Zone?
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Geordi is lost in a pit just before beam-up, and owing to the wonderful
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electrical storms in the atmosphere, the Enterprise can neither detect him at
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all, nor even beam down another party until the window that just closed
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reopens. And, as if things weren't bad enough, Geordi finds that the one
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Romulan Worf and Riker found and beamed aboard the ship wasn't the only one
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there. There's a second one...with a somewhat nasty disposition. The two
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of them are eventually forced to work together to locate the beacon sent
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down, particularly after Centurion Bochra's legs go out from under him and
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Geordi's interface with the VISOR is lost. That's all for that one.
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Plot Two: The Romulan brought on board is dying. He needs a transfusion of
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suitable ribosomes, after cell damage down on the planet. (Nice planet,
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this.) Unfortunately, neither human nor Vulcan ribosomes are suitable. The
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one crewman who would be a suitable donor...is Worf. Now, if you were
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Worf, would you help a member of the race that killed your parents? Neither
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would he. Both Dr. Crusher and Capt. Picard try to convince him to help
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without actually ordering him to do so, but to no avail.
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Plot Three: Did I mention there's also a Romulan ship a couple of light-years
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away, coming on a "mission of mercy" to rescue their comrades? Did I mention
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that Picard tells Commander Tomolok again and again that his crossing over
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into Federation space would be a grave violation of treaty, and a break in
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the ceasefire? Did I mention that Tomolok comes over anyway, demanding his
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crewman be beamed over to him? I did now. :-) As it happens, no shots are
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fired...but only just.
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Okay. I may have skimped a bit on the synop, but believe me, I can't
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adequately convey the tension that's present in most of the story. Time for
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some comments, I think.
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First off, let's take care of one of my two very minor gripes. We never
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really found out why the Romulans were there on the planet in the first
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place. Riker mentions something about a possible base for future attack, but
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that's not really brought up again. Commander Tomolok claims it was a
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navigational error, to which Picard correctly replies, "A simple navigational
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error, Commander? HALF A LIGHT-YEAR on our side of the Zone?" I'd be inclined
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to doubt that explanation, too. We never really discover the true reason.
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Unlike, say, "Q-Who", where many of the mysteries were clearly setups for
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future stories, this simply struck me as a loose end.
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I'll save the other gripe for later, since I have so many good things to say
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about the story. This and "The Emissary" strike me as the only two really
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good multi-plot stories TNG has had. In general, it's distracting. Here, it
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only heightened the tension. Possibly, that's because the plots were related
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(as opposed to, for example, "The Icarus Factor").
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The Worf plot was exceptionally well handled, I thought. It not only made
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sense to me that he'd feel the way he did, it made sense that he'd stick to
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it through and through. As he said, "My Starfleet training tells me one
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thing...but everything I am tells me another!!" How very Klingon. It also
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seemed appropriate that if Picard had actually gone through and ordered him,
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he would have done it. He would probably have lost all respect for Picard and
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transferred off, but he would have done it. I thought for one fleeting moment
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that Picard might do so. He said, very sharply, "Mister Worf...". Worf
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straightened. "That will be all." Then I started breathing again. :-)
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I always wondered what Geordi would be like as a prisoner...now I know.
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He's a smart-ass. One exchange early on goes like this:
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"A Romulan ship will arrive shortly and you will be taken aboard as a
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prisoner of the Romulan Empire!"
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"No, I don't think so. Y'see, we heard that distress signal too, Commodore [a
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sarcastic appellation, not a real rank -- TL], and, well, the fleet is in!
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The skies above us are just filled with Federation ships."
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"You're lying!"
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"I never lie with sand in my shoes."
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Gotta love him.
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He also can think fast on his feet in other ways. When trapped in the pit, he
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digs out some minerals he finds, puts them in a crevice, and phasers them on
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low, melting them into pitons. I knew that goddamn peg-board in PE way back
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when had to be good for something. :-)
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Even Centurion Bochra was well characterized. As an example, when he finds
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out Geordi is blind, he asks, "How did this happen?" "I was born like this."
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Bochra replies, "And your parents let you live?" Heartless, yes; but very,
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very accurate. Well done.
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I thought the gradual buildup of hostility between Picard and Commander
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Tomolok was reasonably well done, though not perfect. I especially liked two
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scenes. The first occurs when the Romulan ship crosses the Zone border into
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Federation space. We see a tight shot of Picard. "Mr. Worf..._Red
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Alert_." And yes, you could hear the words being underlined. Brr. The other
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scene is at the end, when the two ships are poised to blow each other up. The
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Enterprise detects Geordi at that point, and the window's only gonna be open
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for another 3 minutes or something. When Picard finds out that they're
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detecting TWO lifeforms, he quickly manages to propose a truce, in a very
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eloquent speech. I won't go into that very much, though. In addition, the
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relevance to 20th century situations was neither lost nor used as a bludgeon.
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We simply have one final exchange between Riker and Picard, with Picard
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saying quietly (and relievedly), "Brinksmanship...is a dangerous game."
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I've since come to call this story the Romulan Missile Crisis.
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And, finally, my one other mini-gripe, although it's framed in a good point.
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When I heard Wesley mention using a neutrino pulse in the beacon, I yelled,
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"NOOOO! Not again, dammit!" However, it seemed to be used almost correctly
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here. The beacon itself was matter and could survive a storm. It sent out
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neutrino pulses in a specific pattern, which would be able to penetrate the
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storms. (True enough.) Then, all Geordi had to do was change that pattern,
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which isn't that tough. The ship would then know he'd found it and was at the
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beacon's landing point. Assuming they have a good method of detecting
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neuytrinos, which isn't stretching a point too far over four centuries, that
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would work. My one complaint: the beam was shown as unidirectional, which I
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didn't like. So I'm strange.
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Oh, by the way, when I say 'shown' as unidirectional, I mean that that's how
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GEORDI sees it. We don't see anything. There are several shots throughout the
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story of what Geordi's seeing through the VISOR, which were wonderful. And
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there wasn't a big deal made out of it, like there was back in "Heart of
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Glory". Quite nice.
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Well, this has gone on long enough. Time to wrap it up for this week.
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THE RATINGS:
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Plot: 9.5 - Almost unoriginal, but the fusion of the plots helped a lot. Also
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a little off for the non-explanation of why they were there to
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begin with.
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Plot Handling: 10 - Could not have been better.
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Characterization: 10 - See Plot Handling.
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Technical: 9.7 - Some off for the unidirectional beam, but some of that back
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on for the shots through the VISOR.
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TOTAL: 39.2/4---> 9.8. Phew. Keep these up.
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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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"You are my prisoner!"
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"Great. What a strategic triumph for the Romulan Empire."
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--Bochra and Geordi
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--
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Copyright 1989, Timothy W. Lynch. All rights reserved, but feel free to ask...
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