196 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
196 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
WARNING: The following post contains spoiler information regarding this week's
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TNG episode, "Legacy". Be warned.
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Sure?
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Guess so.
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Yawn. Yawn, yawn, yawn.
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No, I'm not tired--I was BORED. Bored stiff. More later, after this synop
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(and if I can't keep this one brief, I'll eat my hat):
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The Enterprise intercepts a distress call from the freighter Arcos, and heads
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to rescue it. However, it blows up just as they reach it. Data detects
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traces of an escape pod, heading straight for the lone city on Turkana 4--
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Tasha's birthplace, and an extraordinarily violent place.
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Riker, Worf, Data, and Beverly beam down and are almost immediately accosted by
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members of the Coalition, one of the two factions controlling the city. The
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Coalition leader, Hayne, tells them that the other faction, the Alliance, is
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holding the two surviving crewmen of the Arcos, and will probably want weapons
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as an exchange for them. He, on the other hand, wants weapons for his help--
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"to keep the peace". Riker temporizes, and as the team leaves, Hayne starts
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researching the Enterprise, having heard them say that a dead comrade was born
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on Turkana 4. Not long afterward, Hayne hails Picard, and presents to him a
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liaison/guide to help with the rescue--Tasha's sister, Ishara Yar.
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Despite great suspicion, Picard accepts Hayne's "offering", and Ishara comes on
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board. She seems possessed of great strength, but she's initially quite bitter
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of what she saw as Tasha's "cowardice" in leaving the planet to join Starfleet.
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After the Alliance hails, demanding Federation reparations within twenty hours
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(or the crewmen die), the crew starts planning a rescue effort.
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Geordi can locate them by boosting the tracers on the escape pod, and Ishara
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knows where it is. Furthermore, she offers herself as a diversion--the
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magnetic implant she wears will set off alarms if she's in Alliance territory.
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The raid occurs, and though successful, Ishara is injured.
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Shortly later, Ishara is visited by Picard, who tells her of her sister's
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heroism, both in life and in death, which seems to warm Ishara somewhat.
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Meanwhile, the tracers show that the crewmen are in an underground compartment,
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far too far down to be able to transport through. Geordi suggests rigging the
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phasers to drill down far enough to transport, but that level's still a maze.
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Ishara says that she could guide them--if not for the implant. Data tells her
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they can remove it, despite the explosive charge, and Ishara not only decides
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she wants that, but that she wants to leave Turkana 4 and perhaps join
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Starfleet. She is welcomed with open arms, but we see her say in a private
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communication to Hayne (ostensibly to say goodbye) that "it's working."
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After the implant is removed and the phasers have drilled, the away team
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(Riker, Data, Worf, and Ishara) beams down. She guides them to the crewmen,
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but then slips away. When a guard she shoots down triggers an alarm, Riker and
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company move out--but he and Data remain behind to search for Ishara. Data
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finds her--rigging the Alliance's fusion generator to overload, thus shutting
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down the defenses and allowing the Coalition's troops to enter. Despite being
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hard-hit by Ishara's betrayal, Data stops her.
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Later, Hayne asks for Ishara back, and despite a revulsion at what's been done,
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Picard agrees, telling Riker that they all share some of the blame for trying
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to see too much of Tasha in Ishara. She leaves, telling Data that her
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friendship with him wasn't all deception. Days later, Data talks to Riker
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about friendship, trust, and the risk of betrayal. He counts himself lucky to
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be spared the "emotional consequences" of betrayal, but then finds himself
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staring at Ishara's implant, which she left him as a keepsake.
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Okay, now. Ready for the rest? Well, too bad, 'cos here it comes anyway:
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The best word I can think of to describe this episode is "pedestrian". It
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didn't do anything, it didn't say anything...it just sat there and expected
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me to enjoy it. For the most part, its expectations were not fulfilled.
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Some specific objections follow.
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First, continuity problems. The story Ishara told about being brought up with
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Tasha (being RAISED by Tasha, for that matter, until she joined the Coalition)
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is in direct contradiction to previously established history. Tasha said
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herself in "The Naked Now" that she was five years old when she was abandoned.
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Not "when my parents were killed"--when she was ABANDONED. Nothing about
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the people whom Ishara claims took care of them for a little while after--and
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nothing about Ishara. And remember that this is when Tasha was "drunk"--if
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Ishara existed, she'd have mentioned her then, hurt feelings or no. I don't
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believe Ishara can exist. (This story also directly contradicts Jean Lorrah's
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_Survivors_, and even though I know that story isn't canonical, I prefer its
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telling by orders of magnitude to this one.)
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Second--Picard's story about meeting Tasha didn't work for me either. The
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Stargazer was destroyed 12 years ago--too early, in my opinion, for the
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incident with the colony he discusses to have happened then. The Enterprise
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was only commissioned a tad over three years ago, and we have seen absolutely
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NO indication Picard had a command between those two. (It could be argued
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that we haven't seen evidence AGAINST it either, but you'd think Picard would
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have mentioned his last command at least once in three years--and wouldn't he
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have a model of it as well in his ready room?) In addition, from the sound of
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it, Picard witnessed this incident not long before assuming command of the
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Enterprise, again putting him between ships. It seems we're meant to assume
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that he had a ship in between--but I don't like it, particularly not if the
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writing staff won't even condescend to NAME the thing for us.
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So, two major continuity gaffes. On to other matters:
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Throughout much of this episode, the crew were acting like idiots, pure and
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simple. Their suspicion regarding her identity was quite understandable and
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acceptable--but their almost complete LACK of suspicion about her motives was
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neither. I can almost accept Data's trust in her--after all, he's always been
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the trusting soul of the ship. But Riker? Picard? WORF? Unbelievable--
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especially Worf. Picard says at the end that the fault was in part theirs,
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and that admission helps a bit--but not nearly enough. I never believed for
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more than about three seconds that she was sincere--and they've been at this
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longer. :-)
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Another dumb move--letting Ishara return to the planet in her condition. Sure,
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I agree it was not a big problem letting her go--it's not their affair, and
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Hayne was right--they don't have jurisdiction. However, don't let her reap
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any benefit from this--put the goddamn magnetic implant back in her. As the
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episode went, she can just run a raid next week and blow up the generator then.
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Moronic.
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Another plot problem--Hayne's finding Tasha's records so quickly. Bev said
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that all Hayne needed to do was call up Starfleet records and find Tasha's
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name. Bull. That may be all well and good for a normal Federation colony,
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but this is a colony whose central government collapsed thirty years ago--
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and which threatened Federation officers with death six years ago. Somehow,
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I don't expect that they can get accurate records for this recent a period.
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Not workable.
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A quick point--don't you think that the Alliance would notice if a giant
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phaser beam started cutting into the ground above it? And don't you think
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they'd immediately kill the hostages if they did? And don't you think the
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Enterprise crew should have thought of that? Apparently, it ain't so.
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Okay. Enough of the big problems. The only other problems I had with it were
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little ones--namely, the technical aspects. Most of the phaser shots here
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looked absolutely AWFUL. The most glaring problem, of course, was the one
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they put in the teaser, where the phaser beam moves with the angle of Ishara's
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wrist as she falls EVEN AFTER she's fired, but the editing seemed very choppy
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all around. Not good.
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Another small problem: there were several times about midway through the
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show when it would have been perfect for Data to show Ishara the holo he has
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of Tasha--_especially_ when she said she doesn't even remember what Tasha
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looked like. If you've established that it's around, why not use it?
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Quick aside: is there any reason Ishara had to dress in that blue spandex for
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the second half of the show? Sure, she looked good in it :-), but it's not
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built for freedom of movement, and it's not the sort of thing we saw ANY of
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them wearing down planetside.
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On to the good points. These are for the most part fairly small, unfortunately.
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First, the teaser was by and large pretty good. They started with a poker
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game, which always helps. (Data won this time--and even caught Riker
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_cheating_ on a magic trick he tried to pull on Data later! He's improving--
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and he's developed a good poker face, too. :-) )
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Second, the final conversation with Data wasn't too bad. I find it a little
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hard to believe he hasn't dealt with betrayal like this at some point in the
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past, but given that assumption, his reactions were understandable.
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Third, Picard dressed down Riker for acting like an idiot and charging off to
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save Ishara during the first raid. It was unprofessional behavior, and he was
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very rightly scolded. Nice work.
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Fourth, at least they got someone who had a resemblance to Tasha. Small point,
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but I like it.
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That's about it. Not exactly a glowing review, is it?
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Oh, well. On to the numbers:
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Plot: 3. I don't mind plots that are a little predictable, or that have a few
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minor holes. This was very predictable, and had a lot of major holes.
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Plot Handling: 4. I could think of worse ways they could have done it, but
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this was dull.
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Characterization: 5. A pretty good Data, and reasonable for everyone except
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for their gullibility. (The teaser helped a lot here.)
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Technical: 1. 'Nuff said.
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TOTAL:
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13/4---> 3.5. Ouch.
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NEXT WEEK:
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Klingons and K'Ehleyr and Kiddie, oh my! This looks absolutely spectacular
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to my eyes.
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Until next week...
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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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"You two have successfully divided the evening between you."
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"_I_ suspect conspiracy--but far be it from me to accuse a superior officer."
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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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