156 lines
8.1 KiB
Plaintext
156 lines
8.1 KiB
Plaintext
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WARNING! The following post contains a review of this week's TNG episode,
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"Who Watches the Watchers?", and as such contains spoiler information. Those
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not wanting to be privy to said details had better duck.
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I mean that.
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Yum. I love a good controversy, don't you?
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This episode should generate lots of interesting discussion...here's hoping it
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doesn't deteriorate into flames TOO fast.
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But, I suppose those of you who haven't watched want to know what happened, huh?
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Okay. Fine. Here goes:
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The Enterprise is on its way to Mintaka III, where a team of 3 Federation
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anthropologists is (covertly) watching a village of Mintakans. Mintakans are
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"proto-Vulcans", roughly at the Bronze Age level of development. As they are
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at such a low level, the Prime Directive is firmly enforced. The ship is en
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route because their holographic generator is about to fail, and their outpost
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could then be seen by the natives. Unfortunately, before they even get there,
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the generator fails entirely, and goes up in a puff of smoke, injuring all three
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scientists, one of whom, delirious, leaves the cave.
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Lots of problems develop. There are two main ones. The first is Palmer, who
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is the delirious anthropologist. They can't find him, which probably means he's
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in a tunnel somewhere, shielded from the sensors. The second is a Mintakan who
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discovers them: Ligo (I think). His wife died a year earlier, and he's raising
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a daughter, Ogee (sp?). He sees the cave appear, and goes up to look. He ends
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up seeing Dr. Crusher helping the scientists, and Riker, Geordi, and Data trying
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to fix the generators. When spotted, he accidentally falls all the way down the
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cliff and ends up with a broken back (I suspect...it's not made clear).
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Crusher, not permitting herself to let him die from injuries THEY were responsi-
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ble for, beams him up to sickbay...and breaks the Prime Directive in a big way.
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Picard, understandably, is NOT pleased.
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He gets even less pleased later. You see, he ordered Ligo's short-term memory
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wiped, but the process wasn't effective. Ligo now reappears on the planet,
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having been miraculously healed of his wounds. From his point of view, he's
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been dead and brought back to life. And, although the old Mintakan legends of
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the Overseer were dismissed as fables centuries ago, Ligo now believes them.
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And he sees as the Overseer the one man who has a godlike presence whom he saw,
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and the fellow who was giving all the orders..."the Picard".
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Riker and Troi go back down to the surface to try to find Palmer, surgically
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altered to resemble Mintakans. They arrive and discover that the process didn't
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work on Ligo, and report that "the Mintakans have started worshiping a god...
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you." Eventually, the Mintakans find Palmer, and resolve to hold him for the
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Picard, since Ligo heard the Picard say he wanted to find him. Troi leads all
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of them but their Elder away, saying she found another one, and Riker then
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proceeds to tie the last one up. He takes Palmer, but Troi ends up captured.
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The Mintakans don't know what to do with her. Ligo suggests that she should be
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killed, to convince the Picard that she acted alone, without the sanction of the
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village, but Nuria, their leader, isn't sure.
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Picard is now put in a major quandary. Does he, as the head anthropologist
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suggests, go down to the surface himself, and give them guidelines to live by
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(thus breaking nearly every oath he's ever taken to Starfleet), or try to find
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another road, possibly sacrificing Troi's life? He resolves to take the second
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choice.
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I'll gloss over what he does here, since much of it will appear in the main
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review. In brief, he beams Nuria aboard for a while, showing her that he is
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not a god, just a member of an advanced race. (It doesn't heal the damage, but
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it contains it.) He then has to convince Ligo, and even with Nuria's help,
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that's not easy. Eventually, he must prove he is not invulnerable, and nearly
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loses his life as a result. (He would've, if Ogee hadn't jostled the bow.)
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Eventually, things are more or less resolved.
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Sorry to be so long-winded there, but this show demanded attention to detail.
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Now, Tim's Random Ramblings:
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Although I had some problems with this episode, they were mostly nitpicking.
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The idea itself was fantastic. Unlike, say, "Symbiosis", where the anti-drug
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message was all but printed on the screen, "Who Watches the Watchers?" managed
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to make a lot of statements about religious fanaticism, but SUBTLY. I wouldn't
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call this a case of rampant Roddenberrying, simply because it was done so well.
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I expect this show to generate lots of controversy, as I said. As well as the
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main religious issues covered, there will probably be a lot of talk about
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whether Picard's choice was correct. I think it was, for the most part.
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Besides, all those Kirk vs. Picard people know as well as the rest of us that if
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old JTK had found himself in that situation, he'd have revelled in it for as
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as his sexual stamina held out.
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The acting of the regulars was superb, far and away, as was that of Nuria. I
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didn't like the acting of those playing Ligo or Ogee, but 'twas wonderful
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otherwise. I actually believed at the end that Picard was completely willing to
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die to repair the damage he had inadvertently caused.
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Picard also had the best arguments I've ever heard for convincing someone you're
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not a god. (Could come in handy, someday. :-) ) When talking to Nuria, the
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conversation goes something like this:
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"You now live in huts, but this was not always so."
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"No. We once lived in caves."
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"But not any more."
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"No. Huts are warm and dry."
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"Then, why did you once live in caves?"
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"The reasonable solution is that once, we did not know how to build huts."
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"Exactly. Just as you once did not know how to weave cloth or make a bow. Now,
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imagine one of your ancestors seeing you as you are today. You can kill from a
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long way away. You have a power she lacks."
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"Only because I have a bow."
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"She's NEVER SEEN a bow!! It doesn't exist in her world! How do you think she
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would react to you?"
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"I suppose...she would fear me."
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"Just as YOU fear ME."
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Even in print, I think it's persuasive. With Patrick Stewart delivering it,
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with his majestic voice and screen presence, he could probably convince anyone.
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(Yes, I admit it. I am an unabashed Patrick Stewart fan. So sue me.)
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I had one small gripe about Riker. When he's carrying Palmer, he took an
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awfully long time to tell the ship to beam him up. The second he disappeared
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from view underneath the cliff-face, I was yelling at the screen, "NOW, you
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morons!"
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However, that was almost offset by the teaser. Data says something like, "At
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Warp 7 we can be there in 23 minutes," at which point the generator goes boom.
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I turned to my friends and said, "How long is it at Warp 9?". Five seconds
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later, Picard says, "Increase to Warp 9." Grin.
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Also, although Ligo wasn't acted very well, he was written well. You realize
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by the end of this that he really is just looking for a way to get his wife
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back, and the mere possibility that the Picard might make this happen drives him
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into his frenzy. He wasn't a villain; just a little misguided and desperate.
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Nice job with the makeup on Riker and Troi. We never got a really good look at
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Riker, but Troi looked quite convincing. Is good. Incidentally, the two of
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them also had a nice conversation right after beam-down about Mintakans and
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their male-female relations. Watch it for yourself.
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Well, I'm starting to babble rather than ramble, so I think it's time to wrap
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things up. THE RATINGS, PLEASE.
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Plot: 10. It dealt with a lot of very serious material, very well.
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Plot Handling: 9. Some off for Riker's idiocy in the chase.
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Characterization: 8.5. Some off for Ligo and Ogee, but perfect otherwise.
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Technical: 10. Lotsa nice stuff.
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TOTAL: 37.5/4 == 9.4. Nice work.
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Next Week:
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After a week of debunking superstition, we get a Halloween episode with a ghost.
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Oh, joy.
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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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"Well, why don't you use your divine influence, and get us outta here?"
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"I can't do that. It wouldn't be proper."
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"PROPER?"
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"It's against my programming to impersonate a deity."
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