157 lines
8.9 KiB
Plaintext
157 lines
8.9 KiB
Plaintext
WARNING: The following post contains spoiler information regarding this week's
|
||
TNG episode, "The Loss". The author takes no responsibility for any spoilt
|
||
appetites if you're daft enough to go beyond this point.
|
||
|
||
One-line thought: I'm glad I didn't rush home for this.
|
||
|
||
Hiya, folks. Sorry I'm late, but the holiday break does that sometimes,
|
||
y'know? :-) (Hope the New Year went well for everyone.)
|
||
|
||
Anyway, I wasn't all that impressed with "The Loss". More detail will be
|
||
following (of course), but first, a synop:
|
||
|
||
After we see Troi counseling Ensign Janet Brooks about dealing with the grief
|
||
caused by her husband's death a few months ago, the Enterprise sensors pick up
|
||
an array of plane-polarized objects...but only for a moment. As they flick in
|
||
and out of sensor "view", Troi starts shuddering and whimpering with pain
|
||
(Ens. Brooks has since gone). A diagnostic is run, but sensors are fine--but
|
||
then, suddenly, the ship can't get into warp, and starts being pulled somewhere
|
||
at one-tenth impulse.
|
||
|
||
While the bridge crew tries various alternatives in speed and direction to
|
||
break free of whatever's holding them (to no avail), Bev finally answers Troi's
|
||
call for help. While Troi now seems fine, she quickly discovers in the bridge
|
||
conference that her empathic abilities have completely vanished!
|
||
|
||
Bev finds no physical traces of her problem, except for some unresponsive
|
||
neurons...to wit, brain damage. She tells Troi that although she'll look into
|
||
all possible ways to help, Troi may never regain her abilities, but Troi
|
||
dismisses the problem as being of no consequence and insists on going back to
|
||
work. Later, Will comes by to lend a hand, but Deanna rails against the way
|
||
that everyone's attitude has changed and says she's doing fine.
|
||
|
||
As Geordi and Data continue analyzing the area they're trapped in, Troi meets
|
||
again with Brooks, and finds that she's unsure of herself without her powers to
|
||
back her up. Later, at a briefing, where Data and Geordi tell the bridge crew
|
||
that they're caught in the gravitational wake of a group of TWO-DIMENSIONAL
|
||
entities, she bristles at Geordi's perceived slight (when he says that it's a
|
||
pity that they don't know whether the entities are sentient), walks out, and
|
||
demands that Bev do something to help. When Bev says that she can't, and that
|
||
Troi may have to get used to this, Troi simply yells at Bev for not coming to
|
||
help more quickly, says she can never recover from this, and storms off to her
|
||
quarters.
|
||
|
||
Not long afterwards, she meets with Picard and resigns as Ship's Counselor,
|
||
saying that she is now unable to fulfill her duties and refusing to listen to
|
||
anything Picard has to say. After Will comes by and tells her that now she's
|
||
stuck on an equal footing with all "normal" humans, another escape attempt from
|
||
the field is made, with no success. After Troi talks for a bit with Guinan,
|
||
who manages to show Troi that even her human side has strengths in counseling,
|
||
the Enterprise comes within view of the entities' final destination: a "cosmic
|
||
string fragment" about 100 kilometers long, and gravitationally powerful enough
|
||
to rip the Enterprise to shreds.
|
||
|
||
After firing photon torpedoes ahead of and into the field in an attempt to
|
||
disrupt it proves worthless, and Brooks comes by one last time to tell Troi
|
||
that even their session without Troi's abilities helped, Picard asks Troi to
|
||
help Data to communicate somehow with these entities, saying that even without
|
||
her abilities, she's the best qualified. Eventually, after despairing that she
|
||
feels as two-dimensional as the beings outside, she suggests they might just be
|
||
acting on basic instinct, and they decide to try simulating the string's
|
||
vibrational frequencies in an attempt to disrupt their single-minded pace. It
|
||
works, and as the Enterprise gets away from them, the emotional "short-circuit"
|
||
they caused vanishes, and Troi's powers are restored.
|
||
|
||
Well, that's the synop. Now for some commentary.
|
||
|
||
First, let me praise what was probably the best thing about the show: the
|
||
wonderful graphics, courtesy of Messrs. Okuda and Sternbach. Most of the
|
||
displays showing the Enterprise in the 2-D field looked very, VERY
|
||
impressive--and the viewscreen display as the first volley of photon torpedoes
|
||
is fired wasn't too shabby either. Mike and Rick, you've earned your pay for
|
||
the week.
|
||
|
||
Unfortunately, much of the rest of the show needed work. A lot of work.
|
||
While the basic premise (Troi loses her powers and needs to deal with that) is
|
||
fine, it wasn't dealt with particularly well. Part of this was due to poor
|
||
writing and directing, and part of it was due to Ms. Sirtis's...shall we say,
|
||
"difficulties" in being convincing whenever Troi feels pain.
|
||
|
||
First, the latter problem. I'd hoped that after nearly 3 1/2 seasons of this,
|
||
Marina would have learned how to show pain better than whimpering and screa-
|
||
ming. Nope. While she wasn't quite in as much of the "screaming ninny" mode
|
||
early on as she was in, say, "The Survivors" or "Encounter at Farpoint", she
|
||
unfortunately made up for it with her sobs as Riker comforted her---some of the
|
||
most halfhearted sobs I have _ever_ heard in my lifetime. Marina, dear, I'm
|
||
not nearly as down on your acting as some people...but you're not making it
|
||
easy for me here. (Of course, it lent itself to one obvious zinger--she tells
|
||
Data toward the end of the show, "We've been thinking about this in three
|
||
dimensions--we have to get two-dimensional!" The retort I fired back at the
|
||
screen is so glaringly obvious that I won't bother typing it in, though--I'm
|
||
sure you folks can figure it out...:-) )
|
||
|
||
Now, for some other problems. First, a quickie, care of my fiancee (who,
|
||
blessedly, is in town visiting, so I can talk about the show with her in real
|
||
time :-) ): let's see now...the power-loss was caused by an emotional over-
|
||
load of such power that it short-circuited her powers...check. But a psychic
|
||
trauma that leaves PHYSICAL MARKS? Remember, she had some neurons that weren't
|
||
responding. I don't like that...not a bit.
|
||
|
||
Secondly, and probably the most damaging flaw of the entire episode: I didn't
|
||
like the fact that she got her powers back at the end. The entire episode was
|
||
built around her coming to terms with her loss, and was trying to drive in that
|
||
even without those abilities, she was still making a valid contribution. There
|
||
was even a clear analogy with Ens. Brooks, who was having problems dealing with
|
||
and accepting her husband's death, which was spelled out for us. Having the
|
||
damage be "undone" at the end cheapens all that...and I for one don't care how
|
||
many speeches I get at the end from Troi about how valuable that experience
|
||
was. If they weren't going to make the loss last longer than one show (if
|
||
something different had happened and she'd gotten them back in half a season,
|
||
fine), then they shouldn't have attacked it from the angle they did. Not good.
|
||
|
||
On the directing: well, I don't have any specific incidents to mention, but
|
||
somehow it just felt a bit choppy to me. I felt jarred by most of the
|
||
transitions in the show, and I really don't think that was intentional.
|
||
|
||
The plot did have a few redeeming features, though. Chief among them was the
|
||
scene between Troi and Guinan, which is too long for me to reproduce here.
|
||
I'll leave you to watch it, but I'll say this much: Guinan is one very, very
|
||
slick individual...and one evil puppy, too. I like her. ;-)
|
||
|
||
As for the "cosmic string" plot: I think I'll stay neutral on this one. While
|
||
I didn't catch any major scientific blunders (I'm sure that if there were any,
|
||
I'll have them pointed out to me quite soon), I didn't get particularly caught
|
||
up in this the way the problems in "Booby Trap" kept me interested. They got
|
||
through it...but that's about the limit of my enthusiasm for it.
|
||
|
||
One last thing: Gates did a surprisingly GOOD job here. She got some of the
|
||
best lines in the show (particularly the one about therapists being the worst
|
||
patients in the world, "except for doctors"). Just thought I'd mention it.
|
||
|
||
Well, I think this review's shorter than most...but I'm still a bit jet-lagged
|
||
(I only got into town on Friday), and I can't really muster up a lot of
|
||
enthusiasm to talk about this further. I'll be more revved up for "Data's Day"
|
||
later this week, I promise. Anyway, the numbers:
|
||
|
||
Plot: 3. It was about a 6-7, but Troi getting her powers back at the end
|
||
undercut a hell of a lot.
|
||
Plot Handling: 5. Adequate, but that's about all.
|
||
Characterization/Acting: 4. A mostly poor job from Troi, and fairly substan-
|
||
dard for everyone but Guinan and Bev (yes, even Picard).
|
||
Technical: 8. Kudos to Okuda and Sternbach.
|
||
|
||
TOTAL: 5. Not the best way to come back from reruns.
|
||
|
||
NEXT WEEK:
|
||
|
||
A wedding, and Data ponders his place in the universe. Looks good on this end.
|
||
|
||
Tim Lynch (Cornell's first Astronomy B.A.; one of many Caltech grad students)
|
||
BITNET: tlynch@citjuliet
|
||
INTERNET: tlynch@juliet.caltech.edu
|
||
UUCP: ...!ucbvax!tlynch%juliet.caltech.edu@hamlet.caltech.edu
|
||
"I have discovered, sir, a certain level of impatience when I calculate a
|
||
lengthy time interval to the nearest second."
|
||
--Data
|
||
|