181 lines
8.5 KiB
Plaintext
181 lines
8.5 KiB
Plaintext
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WARNING!!!! This post contains heavy-duty spoilers for this week's TNG episode,
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"Sarek". Proceed further only with EXTREME caution.
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Flawless. Simply flawless.
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There were disappointments, mind you, but no flaws that I could see. I'll gush
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on a bit more after a synopsis, for those who really want to know what happened:
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The Enterprise takes on Ambassador Sarek at Vulcan, with his new human wife
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Perrin, his aide Mendrossen (also human) and his young Vulcan aide, Sakkath.
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Sarek, before retiring, plans to finish his one final mission: negotiating a
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treaty with the Legaran people. His aides seem overanxious to assure his pri-
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vacy and seclusion, and Sarek himself seems a little cranky, but all is
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basically well.
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However, strange outbreaks of violence begin to plague the crew. Wesley and
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Geordi start yelling at each other after setting up the conference room. Riker,
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O'Brien and others get caught in a barroom brawl at 10-Forward. Bev slaps
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Wesley for no good reason. And, tellingly, when Sarek attends a Mozart recital,
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Picard actually sees him CRY.
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Bev and Troi find this: the outbreaks began almost to the minute when Sarek and
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company beamed on board. Furthermore, they theorize (correctly) that Sarek
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himself is the cause. It turns out that he is suffering from Bendai's Syndrome
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(sp?), a rare malady that afflicts extremely old Vulcans. He is slowly losing
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emotional control. For now, Sakkath has been covertly keeping it in check, but
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the stress of this mission makes that impossible, and the condition is ever
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worsening. Picard is put in the unenviable position of having to confront Sarek
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with this news (after getting past Perrin and the others). He does this, and
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Sarek is finally forced to accept it, after nearly going mad with rage. It
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looks like the mission will fail, as the Legaran will not accept any diplomat
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other than Sarek.
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One risky solution is attempted: Picard mind-melds with Sarek. It provides
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Sarek with the few hours' stability he needs to conclude his negotiations, but
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in the meantime Picard must face the full fury of Sarek's long-suppressed
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emotions (including his never-admitted love for Spock and Amanda). The mission
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succeeds, and Sarek returns to Vulcan to face an honorable retirement, but no
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cure for his disease.
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Well, it was simple enough to synopsize briefly. Now, here are some reflections
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and comments:
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I truly wish I could SPEAK, rather than write, my review of this. No print will
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ever convey the emotional force this show (particularly the last quarter of it)
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possesses. I'll do my best, but keep my all-too-human weakness in mind.
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It was wonderful to see Mark Lenard again. I've always enjoyed the jobs he's
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done for Trek (never having seen him in anything else, I can't comment): first
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as the Romulan Commander, then as Sarek, and, of course, the Klingon commander
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in ST:TMP, but we've seen Sarek the most. I almost think I could see other
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actors in the roles of the TOS "principals" before I could see someone else
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playing Sarek. He seems, well...just so COMFORTABLE in his role. It fits him.
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My respect for his acting has also shot up, specifically for this reason:
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After the mindmeld, he comes on to the bridge, and says to Riker, "Number One,
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please inform the Legaran that Sarek of Vulcan is on his way...". He put just
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enough of Patrick Stewart's inflections and mannerisms in there that you could
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truly BELIEVE their minds were linked, particularly when you saw Patrick Stew-
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art give a convincing job of a very disturbed Vulcan. Mr. Lenard is not com-
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pletely typecast to play an emotionless alien. Both in Sarek's own rage and
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Sarek's Picardisms (is that a word?), he stretched himself. Very well done.
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Let me not forget to praise the other guests on the episode, either. Joanna
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Miles did a good job as Perrin; I could well believe that this is a woman Sarek
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could marry, despite the obvious anguish it must cause him to be married to
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another Terran. Rocco Sisto, in addition, also did a marvelous job as Sakkath,
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especially in the one scene where Data confronts him with the assistance he has
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been lending Sarek, where he is forced to choose between his loyalty to Sarek,
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and his duty to the Federation. (William Denis was okay as Mendrossen, but if
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there was any weak link, he was it.)
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The show looks like it may be leading into a deeper relationship for Picard and
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Bev Crusher. She comes along to monitor the mind-meld, and ends up giving a
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shoulder to cry on to a sobbing Jean-Luc Picard. I saw a tenderness in that
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moment which I've never really believed before, even in the Picard-Crusher
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scene in "Allegiance", which was about the only highlight of that show. I don't
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know if they're going to carry this trend forward, but it'll be interesting to
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find out.
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The sudden violence was rather believable, and fortunately did NOT become a
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focus of the episode. We saw three quick scenes which illustrated the problem
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for us, and then cut to the cause, which is where the emphasis truly lay. (And,
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of course, I've wanted to see a bar brawl on the Enterprise-D ever since reading
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_Strike Zone_. :-) )
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I said at the beginning that although there were no flaws I could find, there
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were some disappointments. I'll cover that, after a few more quick miscellane-
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ous goodies:
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--O'Brien not only had some lines, he had a whole SCENE (he was one of the
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people who started the fight). I repeat my earlier instruction: GIVE HIM A
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FIRST NAME!!!! :-)
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--Some nice attention to continuity. They mentioned Sarek's involvement in
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bringing Koridan (sp??) into the Federation back in "Journey to Babel", among
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his other accomplishments. Also, during the argument between Geordi and Wesley,
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Geordi's falling in love with Leah Brahms came up for the second time in three
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episodes. (I'm starting to think we may see that plot come back eventually.)
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Also, just to bore you further with a list, when the Mozart recital was shown,
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Data was playing the violin in it. Good attention to detail.
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--Picard refers to Amanda in the teaser as Sarek's first wife. This completely
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invalidates the birth of Sybok in my book (though I'm sure some members of the
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audience will disagree), and thus re-establishes my claim that "Star Trek V:
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The Final Frontier" never existed. :-)
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--Splendid music, particularly during the mind-meld and Picard confronting
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Sarek with the truth about his disease.
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Now, to the disappointments:
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1) The obvious. I would like to have seen Spock, or at least some mention made
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of trying to contact him. It's obvious why they couldn't do that, however:
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first, Nimoy costs too much money; and second, they couldn't make any reference
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to Spock (except his past, which they did mention) without pinning themselves
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down to what his status is, and thus what they can do in future films, if any.
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Given that, I'm even surprised the line about Picard first meeting Sarek at his
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son's wedding made it in, since it means Spock's still alive about 25 years or
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so before TNG. (I say 25 years because Picard was a LT then, and has been a
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Captain for quite some time...and no, Perrin looked too young to have a son who
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is now in at least his mid-forties.)
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2) I wouldn't have minded seeing the Legaran, which we never do, but again,
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the conference was NOT the focus of the story, and to show the Legaran would
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given undue focus to them.
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Well, I've rambled on enough. Just one last point: this was credited "From an
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unpublished story...", etc. This is only the second time we've seen a show
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made from an unpublished story--the other was "The Emissary". With that kind of
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record, maybe they should use more unpublished stories.
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And now for something completely numerical:
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Plot: 10. They'd written themselves to an unhappy ending, and they managed to
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get out of it.
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Plot Handling: 10. I knew something was wrong with Sarek before I came in, and
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I was still baffled as to what the hell was going on.
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Characterization: 10, for lack of a 58.
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Technical: 10. Great music and cinematography (particularly with some nice
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close-ups of Picard and Sarek), and workable Treknology.
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TOTAL: 10. I think that's the first full 10 I've given since "Yesterday's
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Enterprise". Certainly, it's the best show I've seen since YE (and, in some
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ways, even more powerful).
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NEXT WEEK: A rerun. Of "The High Ground". But, it's only one week.
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Tim Lynch (Cornell's first Astronomy Major)
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BITNET: H52Y@CRNLVAX5
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INTERNET: H52Y@VAX5.CIT.CORNELL.EDU
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UUCP: ...!rochester!cornell!vax5.cit.cornell.edu!h52y
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"I am returning to Vulcan within the hour and I would like to take my leave of
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you."
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