187 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
187 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
WARNING: The following post contains spoiler infomation about this week's TNG
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episode, "Future Imperfect", so if you don't want to be spoiled...
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...then duck while you still can.
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Oy.
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Letdown city. This show had a lot of promise, but wasted much of it. I'll
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go into detail, after my usual synopsis. (And for those of you planning to
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jump ahead, the synop is 57 lines long this time.) Anyway:
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Riker's birthday party is interrupted when he has to lead an away team down to
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Alfa Onias 3. He, Worf, and Geordi find nothing of consequence, but a sudden
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gas buildup knocks Riker out before beam-up. He revives in sickbay, where a
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strangely altered Bev tells him that sixteen years have passed, and he is now
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CAPTAIN of the Enterprise. (Apparently, he picked up a disease on the planet
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which only recently became active, and caused the memory loss, which may or
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may not be permanent.)
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Riker encounters one surprise after another. First, on the bridge, he sees
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Geordi, VISORless; Worf, now a full Commander, sitting at Ops; Data, in red, as
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first officer; and a Ferengi helmsman. Suddenly, a Romulan Warbird uncloaks--
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Riker instinctively orders red alert, then rescinds it after Data tells him
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that this ship, the Deseus, was expected. It hails them--revealing on board
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ADMIRAL Picard with his aide, Deanna Troi.
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Before long, they beam on board, and tell Will that his amnesia couldn't have
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happened at a worse time--a treaty with the Romulans is imminent, and due to
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his past actions, Will's the chief spokesman. Will insists he cannot continue
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the negotiations, but Picard tells him that, ready or not, he's needed. Deanna
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takes Will to his quarters, where he finds another surprise--a teenage son
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named Jean-Luc. (He finds out from Deanna that Jean-Luc's mother was killed 2
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years ago in a shuttle accident, and was ship's counselor after Deanna left.)
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He doesn't remember Jean-Luc at all, but he soon starts to warm to the boy.
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The Romulan ambassador beams on board--and Riker is not at all pleased to
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discover it's Commander Tomalak, an old enemy. Still, everyone else trusts
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him, and Riker's main fear--that they're revealing the location of Outpost 23--
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is discounted, as the outpost hasn't been strategically important for years.
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Then, Bev calls--Jean-Luc's been injured. After seeing him in sickbay, Riker
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leaves with him, and they talk about losing old memories and building new ones.
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Riker resolves to always be there for Jean-Luc, the way his father wasn't there
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for him. In his quarters, however, when he manages to call up a picture of
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his wife, he sees that it was _Minuet_--and he suddenly becomes very grim.
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On the bridge, he catches everyone in inconsistencies. Geordi couldn't possibly
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be as incompetent as he's been; Worf can't explain his scar; Data can't zip
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through calculations, and then uses a contraction. He demands that the charade
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end--and Tomalak nods, the "Enterprise" vanishes, and Riker finds himself in a
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Romulan holodeck.
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Tomalak claims that their neural scanners helped them make such a good mock-up,
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but is astonished to discover that Minuet, whom Riker harbors such strong
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feelings for, was only a holodeck creation herself. He demands the location of
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Outpost 23, and throws Riker in a cell with Ethan, a boy who "Jean-Luc" was
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modeled after.
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Riker and Ethan (who claims to have been taken from a nearby research station
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on a planet Riker thought was deserted) join forces, and manage to escape from
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their cell. Ethan leads Riker to a forgotten storeroom, but there slips
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himself when he says that only "Ambassador" Tomalak can activate the Romulan
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communications. Riker deduces that this scene is fake as well, and refuses to
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play the game any more. The Romulans dissolve, and Ethan tells him that he was
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left there by his mother when his planet was invaded so that he'd be safe from
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his enemies. The neural scanners let him enact anything he wants, and he took
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Riker because he wanted to see someone real. Riker, touched, takes Ethan (now
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revealed as a vaguely insectlike alien named Barash) with him when he leaves.
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Okay, now. On with the commentary:
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This episode invites two obvious comparisons--one with "Yesterday's Enterprise"
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as an alternate-universe/sets-and-costumes-redressing story, and one with the
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TOS novel _Time Trap_, where Kirk wakes up 100 years later and finds that the
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Federation and the Klingons are now at peace. This show has more in common
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with the former than the latter. This is NOT a good thing.
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First, some rather sweeping gripes. First of all, it's almost established
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FACT that the biggest cop-out ending of all is "it was all an illusion". It
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gives one leeway to do anything--'cos after all, it's not REAL, right? Now,
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the illusion gambit can be enjoyable when used properly--but here, it wasn't
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used right at all. Big disappointment.
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Second, there was an astonishing lack of insight about Jean-Luc/Ethan/Barash,
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and I think bringing him up (thus suggesting we may see him again? No thanks)
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was a mistake. We have no indication as to the REAL reason he did what he
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did; since he showed very little compunction about placing Riker in false
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scenarios earlier, why should we/Riker believe he's telling the truth now? I
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certainly wouldn't have, and wouldn't have brought him on board without a
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little proof of good faith. Bad, bad move--and it unfortunately made JL/E/B
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one of the least-motivated characters in Trek history, I think.
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Now, for some thoughts on the redressing. Some were quite interesting and
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well done--for example, the rank insignia was now a set of horizontal bars
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across the communicator insignia rather than the old pips-on-the-shoulder
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routine, and it looked nice. However, I thought that, with a few exceptions,
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they didn't do a good job showing how much time had "passed". For example:
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--It looked to me like they didn't do much more with Bev and Deanna than change
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hairstyles. Deanna had a tinge of grey in her hair, but little more--and I
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would guess there'd be more than that in aging from (as a rough guess) 30 to
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45. And Bev had virtually no indications of all of the sixteen-year-gap.
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--Worf also looked virtually unchanged. Come on--it's been sixteen years, and
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the only evidence is a SCAR?
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--More importantly, I find it EXTREMELY implausible that nearly everyone would
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have stayed on board--and so close to their earlier ranks, too. Worf's
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promotion up to full Commander is fine, but I find it hard to believe that
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GEORDI's only gone up one grade in sixteen years, considering how quickly he
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shot up over the last three. Data's fine--he may not think he's ready for
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command yet. But I really don't think they'd all still be together--regardless
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of how much they love the ship, that's a long time to be on one mission.
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Okay...some other thoughts.
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It's tough to say much about characterization for a show like this, because one
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can always say "well, Ethan just didn't get the characters exactly right".
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However, I don't buy that. Riker told "Tomalak" that every detail of the
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Enterprise was recreated PERFECTLY, including the people (at least up until the
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end, assumedly)--and if there were problems I spotted, he should have, too.
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That said, here goes.
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Some of the characters weren't bad. I liked Picard as an Admiral--and Stewart
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happens to look good in a white beard, too. Come to think of it, I guess all
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the Enterprise regulars were "normal". In other words, they weren't thrilling,
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but they were consistent--and that was the point. (One thing, though--Bev
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tells Riker that she'll leave some of the explanations to "the Admiral"--not
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to Jean-Luc. That seems awfully distant for someone who's been dear friends
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with Picard for, by this time, decades.) Riker was pretty good, too, I
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thought, particularly at the beginning, but I'll get to that in a minute.
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The one objection I had was to Tomalak, and that one, unfortunately, I really
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think I *can* say that it was Ethan's fault. He was drawing these people out
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of Riker's mind, and Riker's limited contact with Tomalak may have affected
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how accurate the reproduction was.
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Now, the show wasn't all bad. The window-dressing was for the most part
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pretty interesting, and the "future" parts of the show definitely had me
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intrigued. Most of the scenes with Riker and "Jean-Luc" (NOT "Ethan" or
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Barash) were reasonably good, and there were some nice references back to
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earlier shows (for example, the trombone's reappearance, and "Jean-Luc"
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injuring himself in a game of Parrises Squares--gee, did the writers of this
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one just watch "11001001" or what?). In addition, I liked the very beginning
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of the show, with Riker's birthday party, quite a bit. (There were some
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classic lines in it, but I'll save them for you or my .sig.)
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One other thing which I DID like--despite the fact that they went with the
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illusion ending, they at least didn't make it an actual Romulan illusion, which
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they seemed to be telegraphing a mile away. That would have smelled even MORE
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like _Time Trap_, and I wouldn't have enjoyed it a bit. This much was a mild
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surprise.
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However, it really didn't live up to its promise. I think that the production
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team decided that they wanted to do another "Yesterday's Enterprise", and so
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tried something like this. This isn't it, folks.
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So, to sum up: Nice window-dressing, and a fairly decent first half--but it
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fails miserably at the end, unfortunately taking much of the show down with it.
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The numbers read:
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Plot: 4. The entire plot, basically, was Riker taking time to notice the
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inconsistencies. Bo-ring.
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Plot Handling: 5. Adequate for what they had to work with, I suppose, but
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a better director could have done so much more...
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Characterization: 7. A fairly good Riker, and a competent everyone else, but
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not so good on Ethan.
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Technical: 10. Nice window-dressing, and a lovely close-up of the transporter
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beam trying to latch onto Riker and failing.
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TOTAL: 6.5. Could've been worse, but could have stood MUCH improvement.
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Nothing to write home about.
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NEXT WEEK:
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Picard and Wes are trapped on a desert planet, and Wes can only save Picard
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by mastering the spice melange...no, wait, that can't be right...:-)
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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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"Some things improve with age--maybe your trumpet playing will be one of them."
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--D. Troi, at Riker's birthday party.
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--
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Copyright 1990, Timothy W. Lynch. All rights reserved, but feel free to ask...
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