240 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
240 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
WARNING: The following post is *not* imaginary, but *does* contain spoilers
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for "Imaginary Friend". Unless you like seeing non-imaginary spoilers, this
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non-imaginary person makes the very real suggestion that you stay away.
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(Whew...:-) )
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Decidedly mediocre, lads and lasses. Not another "Cost of Living" [in fact,
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not even close to THAT bad], but far from good.
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In fact, the more I think about it, the more disappointed I get,
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unfortunately. More after the synopsis:
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Troi is busy talking to Clara Sutter, a young girl who's essentially a
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"Starfleet brat"; she's been on one ship after another following her somewhat
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remote father's career, and has never stayed in one place too long. Clara
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has an imaginary friend named Isabella; but although her father is worried
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that "Isabella" is keeping Clara away from making any real friends, Troi
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reassures him that it's perfectly normal.
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Meanwhile, the Enterprise enters a mysterious nebula, only to have a small
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glowing object enter the ship. It inspects things for a bit, then finds
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Clara working in the arboretum. It reads her thoughts, and then reforms; and
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"Isabella", now very real, greets Clara. Clara's very puzzled, but happy to
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see Isabella turn real, and Isabella quickly talks her into leaving the
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arboretum and roaming the ship.
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Suddenly, the Enterprise shudders as if hit by something. Strangely, the
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shields registered an impact, but the sensors showed nothing of the sort.
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The continued drag on the ship slows it down more and more, until Isabella
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(invisible, after Clara had entered and been told by her father to go back to
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quarters) sneaks into engineering and somehow fixes things. Geordi and Data
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are mystified, but recommend staying around and collecting samples; Picard
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approves.
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As Ensign Sutter talks to Geordi about Geordi's own childhood living from
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ship to ship (and is reassured by Geordi that Clara should turn out fine),
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Clara winds up in Ten-Forward, where Guinan keeps her busy until Troi arrives
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to bring her back to her quarters. Troi sternly tells her that she should be
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able to tell Isabella (whom no one believes is real and no one has seen) not
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to take her places she's not allowed, but Clara says Isabella won't listen.
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Concerned, Troi arranges to take her to a ceramics class without "Isabella"
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present later that day. As Isabella tries to manipulate Clara into going to
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engineering again, Troi arrives and whisks Clara off to class.
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As the Enterprise registers another mysterious impact, and Geordi finds that
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they've been hitting "strands" of coherent plasma which the warpfield should
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illuminate for them, Isabella becomes more vindictive, wreaking some havoc in
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the ceramics class and then telling Clara that she no longer cares.
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"Now...when the others come...you can *die* with everyone else." The
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Enterprise finds that the strand density is getting thick enough to be a
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problem, and attempts to turn around and leave the nebula.
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Meanwhile, a terrified Clara refuses to go into her room, and it takes Troi's
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promise to go in with her and make sure Isabella isn't around to get her
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inside. The search Troi makes for "Isabella" turns up negative at first; but
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when Troi looks in the closet, Isabella appears behind her. Troi turns and
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gasps, just as Isabella zaps her with some sort of ray and knocks her
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unconscious. Troi revives later in sickbay and tells Beverly and Picard of
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Isabella. They take what measures they can, but then the "web" of strands
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around them tightens, and more entities like Isabella attach themselves to
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the ship and begin draining the shields. With no other choice, Picard takes
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Clara back to the arboretum and manages to bait Isabella into appearing. She
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tells him that her people need energy, and that the crew's cruel behavior
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towards Clara suggests that they should be destroyed. Picard manages to
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clarify that the rules Isabella sees as so restrictive are actually to
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protect Clara from harm, and Isabella calls her people off and leaves, later
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appearing one last time to Clara to apologize and hope that she'll one day
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return.
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Well, that was quick, if slightly sparse. Now, on to the commentary.
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Bad things first; that way I get to save the good stuff for later.
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Bits of this were maddeningly frustrating, and others were just maddening. I
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could see some of what they were trying to do, and bits of it were really
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good ideas. I like the idea of dealing with what a "Starfleet brat" has to
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go through, and I also very much like the idea of seeing the Enterprise
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through the eyes of a child. And they even got a good actress to play Clara.
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Unfortunately, rather than perhaps tackling this in a more "normal" fashion a
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la a "Data's Day" scenario, we instead had the points made through this
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rather uninteresting "imagination turns real" take on things. Two immediate
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examples of illusion masquerading as reality come to mind for TNG prior to
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this: "Where No One Has Gone Before" and "The Bonding". Unfortunately, this
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has *far* more in common with the latter.
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The biggest common element is a child actor who can't act worth beans. Here,
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at least, it was countered by also having a good one around for the *other*
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main guest star; but Shay Astar was absolutely awful as Isabella. When she
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wasn't being unbelievable, she was being completely unexpressive and dull;
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and it didn't help that some of the shots once again managed to bring
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"Children of the Damned" to mind. I realize that a little bit of this may
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have been intentional, in that she was trying to play an alien *pretending*
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to be a child rather than a child; but it didn't come off for me at all.
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We also had one of the worst sermonizing endings I've seen in a long time,
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made all the worse because it rang so *phony*. Picard's little talk at the
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end of "Violations" was a bit over-the-top, but at least it sounded like it
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really came straight from the heart. His final speech to Isabella here, on
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the other hand, sounded absolutely contrived, and had the incredibly false
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let-me-put-my-arm-around-her-to-let-everyone-know-how-MUCH-we-all-love-her
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bit along for the ride. I don't know who's responsible for that; I don't
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think it's either actor's fault, because if you just jump back a couple of
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scenes to Picard dealing with Clara in sickbay, you see just how well they
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*can* interact together in a reasonable way. I just don't know, but I do
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know that this was a major eye-roller.
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Some of the other dialogue was somewhat atrocious as well. First, there were
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vast, vast amounts of technobabble this time, little of which made any sense
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whatsoever (but I'll tackle the science in a minute). More importantly,
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there were a lot of things overused. It's rare that I find myself getting
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tired of hearing a word used in a show, but by the end I was getting ready to
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throw a shoe at the next clown who said something was "unique".
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(Picard: "It seems we're looking at a unique phenomenon; one that hasn't
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been recorded before." Me: "You seem to be exhibiting redundancy, Captain;
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you're repeating yourself and saying things more than once.")
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Now, for the science bit I was threatening about last paragraph. :-) I
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haven't been too down on it lately, because it's been rather unassuming. But
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this time...errrgh. First of all, why anyone thinks seeing a nebula around a
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neutron star is so rare (pardon me..."unique" :-) ) is beyond me; guys,
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neutron stars are formed in supernovae, most of which have nebulae forming
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around them from the debris. Whaddya think the Crab Nebula is? Second of
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all...okay, I know it's a throwaway line, but "thermal interferometry"? No.
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Just...no. (There are other bits, but those are the two that got to me the
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most.)
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(I just did realize, however, that there was a cute change they made to
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account for four centuries worth of cataloging. Instead of "NGC-something"
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[short for New Galactic Catalog if my brain hasn't died on me], we get
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"FGC-whatever", presumably for Federation Galactic Catalog. Cute. Very
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cute.)
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As for the glowing red Tinkerbell-from-Hell plot...well, it had a chance, but
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they didn't go with the angle I really expected from the visuals. My first
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reaction to the visuals of the "strands" themselves (which was a very nice
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set of effects, BTW) was "whoa...they're trapped in a major spiderweb. Step
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into my parlor, said Isabella to the starship..." I fully expected
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everything that was happening to more or less be related to that. I don't
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know if that was ever in mind or just a coincidence, but to instead have it
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come down to another set of intelligent and hungry moralizers was a big
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letdown.
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A lot of this is really just disappointment. They had a couple of good
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premises, but they really went nowhere.
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Now, let me cover the good things--and there definitely were some things to
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like here. First and foremost, I think Noley Thorton did a *very* good job
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as Clara Sutter. In some ways, it's depressing that she had to be "wasted"
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on such a poor script, because actors and actresses at that age who can give
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good performances are few and far between. I hope we'll see her again; she's
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the youngest *realistic* kid I've seen to date on TNG. (I clarify it by age
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because both recent Wes and "Hero Worship"'s Timothy were also very
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believable.)
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Second, while I didn't care for the way the show was done, I do have to say
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that Brannon Braga's touch for incidental dialogue was evident. Scenes like
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Bev's early gossip with Ogawa and Data's "besides...it is clearly a bunny
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rabbit" bit with Guinan are tough to do without seeming cutesy or forced, but
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these definitely passed. (I think having an ongoing background thread of
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Ogawa gossipping to Bev about this guy she's met could make for a nice
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backdrop of realism, by the way. If you're listening, guys...) The regular
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"important" dialogue ran all over the spectrum (Guinan's talk with Clara was
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wonderful, Picard's closing speech to Isabella was one of the most forced and
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insincere speeches I've ever seen), but the incidental background dialogue
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was great.
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The other main guest stars were also good. Jeff Allin did a very good job as
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Sutter, I thought; he was both rather fatigued and haggard from jumping from
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mission to mission, and yet somewhat remote from Clara's point of view. (One
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of the few directing shots that really made me sit up and take notice is the
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opening shot; Troi talking to Clara, while her dad is waaaaaaaay in the
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background, mute and completely uninvolved. I think that was a good way to
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play up what the situation was between them.) And Whoopi Goldberg was great
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to see back; she's still on form. (Truth be told, though, I thought her
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second conversation dragged on too long. Her scene with Clara was terrific;
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very Willy Wonka-esque in some ways, I thought. But the one with Deanna
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needed some pruning.) I hope she keeps it up through the end of the season.
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Troi, as the main regular featured, was a decidedly mixed bag. Many of her
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scenes with Clara were good ones, especially the very first. ["She's real
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for you...and _that_ is real enough for me." Exactly the point.] But some
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of her scenes with other characters (e.g. the one with Guinan above) and even
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some of her scenes with Clara (esp. the turbolift) just rang false. Ah,
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well--it's still miles ahead from the Troi we had prior to this season,
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that's for sure.
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That's really it for the long stuff. Now, a few quick short takes.
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--Purple omelets? Speaking as someone whose father-in-law is occasionally
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fond of...dare I say it...tuna pancakes, I can readily sympathize with
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Deanna's reaction. Isabella definitely had a point. :-)
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--I really liked Clara's bunny rabbit, probably because I had one just like
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it for years and years. Nothing deep about it in the show, just a nice piece
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of security for Clara to hold on to.
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--Seeing Noley Thorton do such a *good* job as Clara only played up more how
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decidedly limited a range Brian Bonsall has as Alexander. The character was
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much less annoying here, because he had little to do, but BB's range ran
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about the length of a word on this screen. Not a good thing.
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--"Besides...it is definitely a bunny rabbit." Yay, Data! (And just what is
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this sudden obsession with bunny rabbits on TNG? :-) )
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--The scene between Geordi and Sutter was quite good, and might also be
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setting a few things up for "The Next Phase", since I gather we'll be seeing
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or hearing more of Geordi's folks there. Neat.
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That ought to do it. It had a couple of good ideas struggling to get out,
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and I actually hope we see Clara Sutter again (it'd be a waste to keep her
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here only), but it got bogged down in a lot of muck. Pity.
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So, the numbers:
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Plot: 5. Both the concept of a "Starfleet brat" and the ship through a
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child's eyes were good; those of Isabella turning real and the
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aliens-from-spiderweb-central needed a lot of work.
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Plot Handling: 2. The good ideas fell flat with a resounding THWUMP.
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Characterization: 5. Terrific Clara, good Guinan/Troi/Sutter, but a truly
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hideous Isabella.
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TOTAL: 4. Not high on the list, folks.
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NEXT WEEK:
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Some of the best preview music I've ever heard in my life, and the
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long-awaited "I, Borg". Looks good from where I sit...
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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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DISASTER WATCH: --Wednesday, 22 April: An earthquake hits the LA basin.
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--Wednesday, 29 April: Riots grip the LA basin.
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--Wednesday, 6 May: George Bush arrives in the LA basin.
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--Wednesday, 13 May: You make the prediction.
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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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