246 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
246 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
|
WARNING: This post contains spoiler information regarding this week's TNG
|
|||
|
offering, "The Next Phase". Stand clear.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Well, if you make an effort to avoid *thinking* about it, it's great fun. As
|
|||
|
soon as you do, it starts to lose something.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I don't normally worry much about plot holes, but there are questions here
|
|||
|
in vast numbers that needed better treatment. But first, the synop:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Enterprise assists a critically damaged Romulan vessel, but when Geordi
|
|||
|
and Ro beam back with some damaged equipment, something strange happens in
|
|||
|
transit. They fail to rematerialize, and no sensors can locate them. The
|
|||
|
Romulan ship manages to save itself by ejecting its engine core (with some
|
|||
|
help from Riker, Worf and Data), but they continue to need power from the
|
|||
|
Enterprise while conducting repairs.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Meanwhile, Ro wakes up in a hallway and heads for sickbay. Oddly, however,
|
|||
|
no one seems to notice her, even when she arrives in sickbay and asks people
|
|||
|
for help. Then, to her shock, she hears Picard and Beverly talking, and
|
|||
|
Beverly expressing dislike for making out death certificates; namely, those
|
|||
|
of Ro and Geordi. As she tries to convince them both that not only is she
|
|||
|
not dead, but she's right *there*, Picard leaves--and walks right through her
|
|||
|
on the way out.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
As repairs continue on the Romulan ship, and Data begins preparations for a
|
|||
|
memorial service, Ro finds Geordi in engineering, as confused as she.
|
|||
|
They're both in the same boat, but at least they seem solid enough to each
|
|||
|
other. Ro tells Geordi that she's concluded they're dead, but Geordi refuses
|
|||
|
to believe it. He leaves through a bulkhead for transporter room 3, leaving
|
|||
|
Ro to "make peace with her former life."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There, he finds Data examining the situation and theorizing that damage to
|
|||
|
the Romulan cloaking device may have caused the transporter malfunction,
|
|||
|
noting that there is a substantial chroniton field present on the Enterprise.
|
|||
|
Ro tries to say goodbye on the bridge, but gets drawn into following a
|
|||
|
discussion of the memorial service; at least, until Geordi arrives and
|
|||
|
convinces her to join him on the next shuttle to the Romulan ship to check
|
|||
|
the situation out.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
They board that shuttle, which Data and Worf are piloting. After Geordi and
|
|||
|
Ro listen to Data and Worf plan their funerals (an eerie feeling, at best),
|
|||
|
they all arrive on the Romulan ship and investigate. Data and Worf find
|
|||
|
little, but Geordi and Ro discover two things of note. First, Geordi finds a
|
|||
|
molecular phase inverter, which quickly leads him to believe that he and Ro
|
|||
|
are both cloaked and "phased", a process which must somehow be reversible.
|
|||
|
Second, they hear two Romulans planning to rig a boobytrap via the energy
|
|||
|
beam supporting them, which will trigger and destroy the Enterprise when it
|
|||
|
goes into warp. They leave to attempt to warn the Enterprise somehow; and a
|
|||
|
spectral Romulan gets up and follows them every step of the way.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Data's inspection of all the chroniton fields turns out to correlate with
|
|||
|
every place Geordi or Ro have appeared, and Geordi quickly comes to believe
|
|||
|
that it's their interactions with normal matter such as the bulkheads that
|
|||
|
causes the fields. He begins walking through everything he can to get Data's
|
|||
|
attention, just as Ro, on the bridge, is accosted by the Romulan, who demands
|
|||
|
she take him to Geordi. Geordi discovers that the anion beams Data uses to
|
|||
|
wipe out the chroniton fields help him to solidify--but at this setting, it's
|
|||
|
both slight and temporary. En route to Geordi, meanwhile, Ro double-crosses
|
|||
|
the Romulan and tries to get away. A long chase ensues, triggering a run of
|
|||
|
chroniton fields that Data (and Geordi close behind) follow. Eventually,
|
|||
|
Data is none the wiser, but Geordi arrives just in time to save Ro, acciden-
|
|||
|
tally knocking the Romulan out through a bulkhead and spinning off into space
|
|||
|
in the bargain.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Romulan ship, repaired enough to get home, leaves, and only the
|
|||
|
decontamination procedures used on the chroniton fields prevent the
|
|||
|
Enterprise from going into warp. Frantic, Geordi and Ro realize they have to
|
|||
|
have a high-intensity anion beam directed at them, and it'll be short
|
|||
|
duration enough that it had better be in front of a lot of people. They
|
|||
|
proceed to their own wake in Ten-Forward, where with a little judicious
|
|||
|
action (including setting the Romulan disruptor on overload, finally), they
|
|||
|
manage to induce a high enough anion beam to allow Picard and Data to see
|
|||
|
them for a moment. Data orders a highest-power anion beam to flood
|
|||
|
Ten-Forward, and Geordi and Ro return to normal. All is well, but Ro finds
|
|||
|
herself questioning her earlier skepticism out Bajoran beliefs in an
|
|||
|
afterlife.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There, that should do. Now for the commentary.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I'm trying to write this as fast as I can, because I *did* enjoy it a lot,
|
|||
|
and the more I think about the show, the more reasons I come up with why I
|
|||
|
shouldn't have. :-) It just comes down to a question of believability, and
|
|||
|
if you stop to ponder it, this show sets off more suspension-of-disbelief
|
|||
|
alarms than I've seen in a very long time. I'll go through them in brief,
|
|||
|
and then get to the definite good things.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
First, foremost, and utmost, there's this weensy little problem with their
|
|||
|
intangibility. Fine; they're intangible. Why, oh *why*, then, is it that:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(1) They can walk on the floor?
|
|||
|
(2) They have to take shuttles and turbolifts?
|
|||
|
(3) They apparently need to breathe (e.g. the Romulan) and eat (e.g.
|
|||
|
Geordi's last remark about not having eaten for two days or so)?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The latter two are not overly big deals, but the first is amazingly so. I
|
|||
|
realize that without something like that, you get both incredible plot
|
|||
|
complications and incredible budget overruns (after all, as long as people
|
|||
|
can walk on the floor the rest is easy :-) ), but even so, it's very
|
|||
|
careless. Hell, I'd have been satisfied if there'd just been a quick
|
|||
|
exchange on order of "but hey...wait a second, if we're walking through
|
|||
|
everything, why can we still stand on the deck?" "Damned if I know."
|
|||
|
It doesn't need to be *explained*, merely *acknowledged*. This wasn't, and
|
|||
|
it makes Ron Moore look like a fool. (And Ron's done good stuff, so I think
|
|||
|
from past experience we know he's NOT a fool.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A related problem that was most likely just a mistake: Ro very definitely,
|
|||
|
and very longingly, *touched* both her chair and her console when she went to
|
|||
|
the bridge to say her goodbyes. The camera made a special point of noting
|
|||
|
both of those events. No explanation, however, was given. I'm willing to
|
|||
|
bet this was just a quick brain-fade on the writer's or director's part, but
|
|||
|
that really is the sort of thing that should be caught in the editing stage.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The other plot *problem* I guess I had was with Geordi's tactics in getting
|
|||
|
Data's attention. C'mon, Geordi, you can do a *lot* better than that. If
|
|||
|
you want to get Data's attention by making things look nonrandom, start
|
|||
|
drawing geometric shapes in the wall or on the console. Hell, start
|
|||
|
triggering deja vu by drawing the number 3 everywhere if you want to. A
|
|||
|
series of pulses, even in a somewhat nonrandom order, aren't likely to set
|
|||
|
anything off nearly as much as something like that. Even if you just want
|
|||
|
to do pulses, try something like an SOS pattern, or a sequence of prime
|
|||
|
numbers. *Something*. I liked the idea, but this made Geordi look a bit
|
|||
|
shy of gray matter.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The other thing I disliked a bit wasn't really a plot issue so much as a
|
|||
|
padding issue. The entire subsubsubplot with the phased Romulan was almost
|
|||
|
entirely out of left-field. There's no reason given for how he got that way
|
|||
|
in the first place: there are tons of likely explanations, but you'd think
|
|||
|
one of them would be forthcoming. There's no reason given for why he wanted
|
|||
|
to follow them to the Enterprise: to stop them from warning the others? to
|
|||
|
stop them from returning to normal? to join them? If the last, why not
|
|||
|
simply ask for it instead of threatening them? And finally, the chase scene
|
|||
|
was really...well, "gratuitous" is the most apt word I can think of for it.
|
|||
|
It kept bouncing back and forth between action and slapstick, and as a result
|
|||
|
it didn't really work as either for me. I get the impression that this was a
|
|||
|
combination of show padding and an excuse to show lots of FX, plus a chase
|
|||
|
scene to boot. There really should be better reasons.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Romulans have been really *interesting* in the past, too, especially
|
|||
|
from Ron Moore; "The Defector" is a vivid example. Here they were basically
|
|||
|
stock villain XJ-28, except for the fact that they had a cloaking device.
|
|||
|
It's depressing.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
But enough of the bad; on to the good. The *premise* of the show was a good
|
|||
|
one, both in the Interphase device and in Geordi and Ro reacting to their
|
|||
|
situation. And character-wise, most of it was very well executed.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Ro, in particular, has really come into her own. I liked her back in "Ensign
|
|||
|
Ro", but mostly as a fairly feisty plot device. "Conundrum" improved things
|
|||
|
a bit, but this did it a lot more. Yes, she's still acerbic; that's no
|
|||
|
problem. She's also vulnerable, and shaped a lot more by her "outdated"
|
|||
|
Bajoran traditions than she cares to realize. This said a lot, I think,
|
|||
|
about lessons one learns in childhood; even if you end up rejecting them as
|
|||
|
foolish as an adult, sometimes they're deeply ingrained enough that you
|
|||
|
revert to them when push comes to shove. Her interest in Riker was well
|
|||
|
carried off, too; I suspect "Conundrum" may have a few ramifications after
|
|||
|
all between the two of them.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Geordi was fairly nice, but somewhat less so. This was probably because he
|
|||
|
ended up in a far more technical role, as the genius who figures it all out.
|
|||
|
Somebody had to, but it makes him less easily empathized with and somewhat
|
|||
|
less interesting to watch. Geordi was competently characterized, certainly,
|
|||
|
but there wasn't much new here the way there was for Ro. (His reactions to
|
|||
|
Ro's calm acceptance of her "death" were a major exception to that, and a
|
|||
|
pleasure.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Data and Worf were quite good; both reacted about as I'd expect them to for
|
|||
|
Geordi's apparent death. Data's unintentional eulogy in the shuttlecraft was
|
|||
|
the highlight of his role this week; as I'm about to speak at my own
|
|||
|
grandfather's memorial service this weekend, it touched a major nerve. It
|
|||
|
was also very touchingly ironic the way he so quietly delivered a very
|
|||
|
beautiful summing-up of Geordi's effect on him, yet professed not to know
|
|||
|
what to say. Very, very human indeed. As for Worf, the little insight we
|
|||
|
had into his beliefs was most intriguing, and seems to fit in fairly well
|
|||
|
with the "it is only an empty shell now" attitude most Klingons have towards
|
|||
|
the body. (I just *wish* he'd used the words "Black Fleet" once. Just once,
|
|||
|
guys, that's all I ask...)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Picard, Riker, Bev, and the random crewmembers were fine, but had
|
|||
|
significantly less to do than the others above. (Riker's reaction to the
|
|||
|
wake was perfect, though; the only thing that would have been better would
|
|||
|
have been to have him admit to having had a hand in planning it, which is
|
|||
|
what I expected; it *was* rather New Orleans-ish, after all. :-) ) The
|
|||
|
Romulans were...well, they weren't characters so much as plot devices, so
|
|||
|
they're not very relevant. The crucial ones were the four I mentioned in
|
|||
|
detail, I think.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The directing was fairly typical: no real edge-of-your-seat surprises, but
|
|||
|
entertaining enough. (Sort of midrange for David Carson, I guess; he did
|
|||
|
"Yesterday's Enterprise", which was expertly done, but also did "Redemption
|
|||
|
II", which seemed very rushed and hurried.) The chase scenes, despite being
|
|||
|
somewhat gratuitous, *were* fairly fun to watch; I just found myself asking
|
|||
|
why afterwards.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The FX were on the whole very good for the phasing, but once or twice things
|
|||
|
looked pretty obviously matted. (The first one, with Picard walking through
|
|||
|
Ro, is the biggest example.) The best one, far and away, was when Geordi was
|
|||
|
pushing his hand into the engineering console with difficulty; especially
|
|||
|
given the reflective surface, that looked *incredibly* good to me.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The music was better than usual for Dennis McCarthy, enough so that I thought
|
|||
|
it was Jay Chattaway. Good work. :-)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I think that's most of it. A few short takes:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
--I think it would have been very interesting to have Geordi note the
|
|||
|
parallel between here and "The Most Toys". In TMT, we saw Geordi helping to
|
|||
|
arrange the aftermath of Data's apparent death, and here, we saw Data
|
|||
|
planning Geordi's own funeral. That's not a combination you see every day,
|
|||
|
and it certainly called up images of TMT in my mind.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
--"Are you saying I'm some kind of blind ghost with clothes?" Loooooove that
|
|||
|
line. :-)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
--The final scene with Geordi and Ro was almost perfect. I liked the fact
|
|||
|
that they didn't just end on the party, as I thought they might; and Ro's
|
|||
|
comments were good. If they'd cut off their laughter five seconds earlier,
|
|||
|
it would've been superb; as it is, things went on just slightly too far past
|
|||
|
the annoying line. Ah, well, no big deal.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
--The subplot with the phased Romulan might have been gratuitous, but that
|
|||
|
Romulan *looked* incredibly spectral. Good makeup job there.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Well, that ought to about do it. I wouldn't call this high drama the way "I,
|
|||
|
Borg" was by any means, but if you turn most of your mind off, it's a lot of
|
|||
|
good fun. That's enough for me most of the time.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
So, the numbers:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Plot: 5. Nice concepts, but Swiss Cheese Central.
|
|||
|
Plot Handling: 8. Strike the phased Romulan plot and you're done.
|
|||
|
Characterization: 9. If Geordi had had more meaty stuff, this'd almost
|
|||
|
undoubtedly be a 10.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
TOTAL: 7.5, rounding up a bit for good music and FX. Not bad at all.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
NEXT WEEK: A rerun of "Violations", so we can all breathe.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Tim Lynch (Cornell's first Astronomy B.A.; one of many Caltech grad students)
|
|||
|
BITNET: tlynch@citjuliet
|
|||
|
INTERNET: tlynch@juliet.caltech.edu
|
|||
|
UUCP: ...!ucbvax!tlynch%juliet.caltech.edu@hamlet.caltech.edu
|
|||
|
"Are you saying I'm some kind of blind ghost with clothes?"
|
|||
|
--Geordi LaForge
|
|||
|
--
|
|||
|
Copyright 1992, Timothy W. Lynch. All rights reserved, but feel free to ask...
|