173 lines
9.8 KiB
Plaintext
173 lines
9.8 KiB
Plaintext
WARNING: The following article, which does not have the flu in any way, does
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contain spoilers for this week's TNG episode, "Hero Worship". Those readers
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without the flu (or with...what the hey) who wish to avoid being spoiled
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should bail out here.
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Wait a sec, that kid *can* act...
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Well, I'm impressed. A little talky, and one or two slightly silly bits, but
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on the whole rather nice. But first...yes, you guessed it...a synopsis:
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The Enterprise approaches the Black Cluster (a group of collapsed protostars
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with an extremely strong and erratic gravitational pull) in search of the
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science vessel S.S.Vico, which went missing there two days earlier. They
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find the Vico, adrift and with a large amount of structural damage--and when
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they beam aboard to obtain the logs, they also find a survivor: Timothy, a
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child trapped under a beam.
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Transport proves impossible without moving the beam, and moving it is likely
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to cause structural failure of the surrounding area, so Data sends back the
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rest of the away team and rescues Timothy on his own. Once in sickbay and
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attended to, Timothy says that the Vico was attacked without warning, and
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that he just barely managed to hide from a brutal boarding party. He also
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tries his best to keep Data in the immediate area, but once he falls asleep,
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Data goes to assist Geordi in Engineering.
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They find that an EM pulse of some kind corrupted nearly all the Vico's logs,
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including all the sensor data. As they get to work on what they can save,
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Geordi tells Data [at Data's behest] of being caught in a fire once, and
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notes that for a long time afterwards he wouldn't even let his parents out of
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earshot. Meanwhile, analysis of the Vico from the Enterprise sensors shows
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that any attack must have occurred inside the Black Cluster, probably with
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disruptors rather than phasers, and at *very* close range. It's possible,
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although unlikely--but when Geordi hears talk of a boarding party, he
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protests that based on available data, that *is* nearly impossible--which
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means Timothy's hiding behind a convenient lie. Troi suggests that Data
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spend more time with Timothy, since he already has Timothy's trust and can do
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the most to help him out of shock.
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After Data visits Timothy for a short time, they discuss Data's android
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nature. When Timothy realizes that Data is smarter and stronger than humans,
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and has no emotions, he takes this as a model, and greets Troi shortly
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thereafter as an "android".
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Picard, with little time remaining before they must enter the Cluster to find
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out what happened, is less than enthusiastic about this twist. Troi,
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however, is not surprised--she says it's a new way for Timothy to suppress
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the trauma, and says he'll grow out of it before too long. In the meantime,
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Picard orders Data to make Timothy "the best android he can possibly be".
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Timothy tries his best to *be* an android, tentatively shaking off questions
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about nightmares with "I...do not require sleep", imitating Data's head
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motions startlingly well, and even making Beverly put her medical data on him
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in android-type phrasing (e.g. "optical sensors functioning normally").
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Eventually, as the Enterprise enters the Black Cluster, he begins to show
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signs of becoming human again (laughing, for a start). Data, at Troi's
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suggestion, then starts telling Timothy of his own quest for humanity,
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pointing out that although he can't feel bad, he also can't take pride in his
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abilities, take pleasure in his accomplishments, or even savor the taste of a
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good dessert.
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As the Enterprise approaches the center of the cluster, they find both
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sensors and phasers completely useless. As Data notes that the same would
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apply to both disruptors and cloaking fields (making it impossible for a ship
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to have attacked the Vico inside the cluster), Picard calls Timothy to his
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ready room. Timothy initially sticks to his story, but when told by Data
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that "androids do not lie", says that the destruction was his fault.
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That belief is quickly found to be in error--nothing he could have
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accidentally touched while falling could have endangered the ship with safety
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precautions in place--and Timothy starts telling Data everything he
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remembered the Vico's crew saying as the situation worsened. With the
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gravitational distortion increasing faster than their shield power, Data
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puts Timothy's memories together with his own reasoning and orders shields
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down. It works: the effect was a harmonic amplification of their own
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shields, and dropping them dissipated it. The ship leaves the cluster,
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secure in knowing what happened to the Vico--and Timothy, now once more in
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the world of humanity, still hopes to be Data's friend.
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Hmm. Well, that should pretty much cover it. Now, the Tim Lynch Babble
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[pat. pending]:
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First of all, I can reiterate what I said at the beginning. (Reminds me of
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an old Drabble cartoon: "first say what you're going to say, then say it,
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than say it again and then say that you said it" "I think I'll just write
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big" :-) ) After seeing the preview last week, I was somewhat skeptical
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about Joshua Harris's [Timothy] ability to act. Fortunately, the preview
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showed his worst scenes ("we were attacked!") without any of his good ones.
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An extremely pleasant surprise--and a *very* good portrayal of someone trying
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to get every last surface mannerism of Data down. (I loved the head
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movements bit, too. :-) ) Of course, with a name like Timothy, we knew the
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kid couldn't be all bad. :-)
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As long as we're on the subject of actors, applause to Brent Spiner for this
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one. Data is starting to inch his way back to the "much more human than he
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lets on" character he was two seasons ago [before something like "In Theory"
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threw a spanner in the works], and it shows. The writing's obviously
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responsible for some of it, but it's clear to me that Brent never really
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wanted to let that part of Data go. Little things like Data's tiny flourish
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after finishing the sculpture with Timothy, his "everything is going to
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be...okay" line, and his "if I could taste...my dessert" speech rank among
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the better bits Data's had in quite a few episodes. Nice.
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From actors...to actors-also-directing. Well, Patrick Stewart isn't up in
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the Rob Bowman/Jonathan Frakes first tier of TNG directors, but his sophomore
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outing's a lot better than "In Theory", his first one. The cuts seemed much
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crisper, and the presentation much better (at least in a few places, good
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enough to make me sit up and notice, e.g. Data and Timothy's beam-out).
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Okay, so the "Data finishes the sculpture at super-speed" scene still looked
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a bit silly, but I'm not sure how easy it is to get around that. Lots of
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improvement here.
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"Most Improved" might have to go to Hilary Bader, the writer of the show,
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though. Her only other TNG episode to date was the aptly-named "The Loss".
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This one was equally character-driven, but it *worked*, unlike "The Loss".
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Data took just the right tacks in most places, and without much in the way of
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visible prompting. It was still a bit talky (most notably in Troi's
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scenes--this time I'm siding with those saying "sure it was realistic, but it
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got downright boring on occasion"), but on the whole it worked. Without
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Brent and Joshua Harris, it wouldn't have--but it also wouldn't have without
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a better sense of what works and what doesn't for Data. Nice.
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The subsidiary, "Black Cluster from Hell" plot...well...it was secondary. It
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was at least somewhat more plausible than the Soliton Wave from Hell-Squared
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plot from "New Ground" [for example, there were no evident stooooopid
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experimental blunders this time], but it still needed work. This time, at
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least, they integrated it a bit better with the main plot--and it did have
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the saving grace of having Data's "Captain--_drop the shields_."
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[pause...stare...] save things. (That sounded a bit disjointed, I think.
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Ah, well.) The "graviton wavefronts" were a complete bust for me,
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though--this isn't water waves you're dealing with, guys, so having them
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"wash up" on the ship just looks more silly than anything else.
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The only objection I have to the Data/Timothy plot as far as what went into
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it is more of a "what was left OUT of it". This called up a lot of parallels
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with Data's raising of Lal in "The Offspring", as well it should have--and it
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would have been interesting to have Data realize that he was getting, if only
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for a short time, a second chance at fatherhood of sorts. 'Twould have been
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nice.
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The FX--same as always, nothing really new to report. The music, however,
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was another Jay Chattaway outing--and the wood flute [is that what it is?
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I'm no musician, but I think that's right] from "Darmok" was very much in
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evidence here, and just as pretty. If we can get a few more like him...
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Well, that should just about do it. Maestro, the numbers:
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Plot: 7. 9 for the Data/Timothy, 5 for the Black Cluster.
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Plot Handling: 8. A bit on the talky side, and Stewart's not tiptop yet,
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but definitely getting there.
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Characterization: 9. Troi got a little annoying here and there, but
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everyone else worked very nicely.
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TOTAL: 8.5, once I up it half a point for music/FX. (Actually, I'm upping a
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full point for music and then back down half of one for FX, just in case
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someone's actually masochistic enough to keep track. :-) ) Nicely done.
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NEXT WEEK: A day's delay due to a basketball game preemption (bleah), and
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then...
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Telepathic aliens, coma central, and a lot of coerced memories. The long
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awaited "Past Perfect" appears..."Violations".
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Stay healthy, all.
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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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"I have been told that imitation is the sincerest form of flattery."
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--Data
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--
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Copyright 1992, Timothy W. Lynch. All rights reserved, but feel free to ask...
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