146 lines
7.8 KiB
Plaintext
146 lines
7.8 KiB
Plaintext
WARNING: The following post contains spoilers for this week's TNG episode,
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"The High Ground", in the context of a review. If you don't want to know
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what happens, tread lightly.
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I'm quite serious here.
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Brrrrrrr.
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I think "chilling" is a good word for this one, folks. I was worried about it
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a little after seeing the preview, but Melinda came through. Here's a synop,
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though, before I go into any details.
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The Enterprise is orbiting Rutia 4(?), a nonaligned planet. The current
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government has been the victim of many terrorist attacks by the Ansata, a group
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that wants the independence of the Western Continent. All away teams are beam-
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ing down armed.
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A bomb hits just before Worf, Data, and Beverly are on their way to a meeting.
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Bev wants to stay behind and treat the injured; Picard allows it grudgingly.
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Bad move--suddenly two terrorists appear, literally out of nowhere, and kidnap
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her.
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Riker, throughout most of the show, is with the security leader on Rutia,
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Alexana Devos. She was once a moderate, but now is committed to completely
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wiping out terrorism in the city (after, among other things, three assassination
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attempts against her, and the "accidental" blowing up of a shuttle bus, killing
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about sixty children). Her methods, though a little heavy-handed, are apparent-
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ly far less harsh than those of her predecessors, now deceased.
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Picard and the others aboard ship are concentrating primarily on finding Bev
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with Federation technology. The idea is to find out what mode of travel the
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Ansata are using, and pinpoint the power source. Wesley wants to be down on
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the planet looking (hey, it _is_ his mother), but is assigned to work with
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Geordi and Data on this project.
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As it happens, the terrorists are moving interdimensionally, using principles
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first put forth in the Elway theory. (Honest...it's not my fault the show aired
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on Super Sunday. :-) ) Unfortunately, the shifting causes substantial genetic
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damage: small, and possibly reversible early on, but lethal after enough
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shifts. Hence, the kidnapping of the good Doctor. The shift does leave certain
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traces, which will allow the terrorists to be traces...after enough shifts have
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been recorded to pin down a pattern.
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Meanwhile, Beverly is down with the Ansata leader, a fellow called Sinn. He
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considers himself to be fighting a war for independence, a Rutian George
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Washington. Bev tries to argue the point with him, and succeeds only in under-
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mining her own resolve. After Sinn receives word of Riker's attempts to meet
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with him (to talk terms, which Sinn doesn't believe), he decides to get the
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planet's (and the galaxy's) attention in a bigger way: by destroying the
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Federation flagship.
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This attempt, fortunately, fails by a whisker. Geordi manages to remove the
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explosive locked to the dilithium crystal chamber and beam it out just in
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time. However, the attack leaves three dead, four wounded (including Worf),
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and Captain Picard taken into the hands of the Ansata.
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This synop is getting long, so I'll just say that after one more shift (Sinn
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coming on the Enterprise to name his terms), they pinpoint the hideout, and
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a commando raid is pulled. Sinn is killed just as he is about to kill Picard
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(maybe), Picard and Bev are freed, and several of the Ansata are rounded up.
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However, it doesn't look like the end. Nor should it.
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Phew. Sorry about that, but without most of the salient details, much of my
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later discussion is a bit meaningless. Now, onwards.
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The more I think about this episode, the more I like it. It's a wonderful
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contrast to "The Hunted", which, as you know, I wasn't too thrilled with.
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Here, nearly everything was done right.
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Melinda captured perfectly all the problems of terrorism. (I haven't had
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any direct experience with it, fortunately, but we've all been living with
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it indirectly for a long time.) Here we had an adversary that didn't "play
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by the rules", that could attack without warning (and did), and that seemingly
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had no regard for human life. And yet, despite the irrationality of terrorism,
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as Data says, it often does seem an effective tool for political change. (In
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a wonderful little touch, he uses as an example 'the Irish unification of 2024',
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which may be a little too far ahead.)
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Every approach fails. If they try to negotiate, it's seen as a trap, and the
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attacks increase. If you try to exert force, the terrorists often become
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folk heroes, and you counter your own moves. There's no way out. I don't
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think I've seen anything else that conveys this particular feeling of
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helplessness so well.
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In addition, the conversations between Bev and Sinn did a very good job of
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debating the concept of terrorism itself. Every argument she uses, he counters
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in some way. He invokes George Washington. He claims (quite correctly, in my
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view), that "the difference between generals and terrorists is quite simply
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the difference between winners and losers." (By the same token, I've always
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felt that the only difference between "terrorists" and "freedom fighters" is
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in whether you believe in their cause or not.) He uses fear as a weapon, not
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necessarily because he enjoys it, but because it WORKS. As he puts it, when
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asked "Is fear the only weapon you have?", "No...but it's a good one." By
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the show's end, Bev is halfway converted, to the point where, as Picard rather
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abruptly brings to her attention, she is arguing for a man who could quite
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possibly have murdered her son. (Picard was taken before the battle was over,
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you see, and Wes was on the bridge.)
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Now, I did have one or two qualms about the show. My biggest one involves the
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assault on the Ansata base. Why on earth did Riker go down with the team?
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By his own logic, which he's used to prevent Picard from beaming down into
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possibly dangerous situations, he should never have left the ship. Surely,
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there must be some person in Security who is an expert on terrorist tactics.
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There's very little else to fight about, though. (Some may quarrel with the
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open-endedness of the ending. I don't. It's not an issue that lends itself
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to that pat an ending. I liked it in "Loud As a Whisper", and I liked it
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here.)
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Beverly was done better here than I've seen her in a long time. At one point,
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for example, Sinn calls her an idealist. She replies, "I live in an ideal
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culture. We have no need...", etc., for all the violence. Now, this had
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several people I was watching with bitching about Roddenberryism. Nonsense.
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Judging by how easily Sinn shot the argument down, I don't think it was meant
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as a true statement about the Federation. It is, however, exactly the sort
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of thing I've always pictured Beverly as thinking, and was not at all surpri-
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sing to hear. Extremely well done.
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I also, just as an aside, found the attack on the Enterprise to be much
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better done than the complementary scene in "The Hunted". In the latter,
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it was more a "oh, gee, look where he is now" feeling. Here, there's much
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more of a sense of having lost all control over the path you're on, and there's
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nothing you can do about it.
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Well, I think that's about it. Suffice it to say that I thought Melinda did
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a superb job, and heartily recommend it. Now, the ratings, please:
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Plot: 10. Terrorism's a tough job, and she did it right.
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Plot Handling: 8.5. A large deduction for Riker, but essentially perfect
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otherwise.
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Characterization: 10. Bev alone gave it a 9, and the others were done just
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right.
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Technical: 10. The explanation of the dimensional shift hung together
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internally very well. That's all we can ask.
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TOTAL: 38.5/4==> 9.6. Well worth the wait.
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NEXT WEEK:
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Q is back, and the E'prise is in trouble. Hey na, hey na, Q is back.
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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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"He's added another chair to the bargaining table."
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"YOU added the chair--I am merely forcing you to sit in it."
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