142 lines
7.9 KiB
Plaintext
142 lines
7.9 KiB
Plaintext
WARNING: The following post contains critical plot information relevant to
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this week's TNG episode, "Night Terrors", so if you're skittish about being
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scared...go 'way.
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In brief: not quite a standout, but far better than I expected.
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That sounds about right. If not for one major flaw, I think it could've been
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extremely good--but I thought it was pretty good regardless. Here's what
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happened:
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The Enterprise enters an uncharted binary system in search of a science
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vessel, the Brittaine, which has been missing for about a month. It finds the
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Brittaine, intact but adrift...and all the crew are dead of extremely
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unnatural causes.
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All but one, that is. The scientific advisor, Hagan, a Betazoid, is alive,
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although catatonic and withdrawn. While Troi tries to get through to him,
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Geordi and Data try to restart the Brittaine's engines--but although
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everything's working fine, there's no motion. Before long, Beverly tells
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Jean-Luc of her findings--the crew of the Brittaine, with no apparent outside
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influences, killed each other. Meanwhile, Troi has a nightmare, of floating
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adrift in a fog with a voice saying only "eyes in the dark, one moon
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circles..."
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Four days later, with no answers in sight, and tempers mounting (O'Brien gets
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paranoid about Keiko's alleged "affair" with another man, for example, and
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Picard hears his ready room door buzz many times with no one there), Picard
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decides to leave the area. Unfortunately, the engines suddenly fizzle out and
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stop working, leaving the ship adrift. Data's analysis (SIX days later...)
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shows that they're caught in a "Tychon rift", and need a large explosion
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(greater than even the photon torpedoes can generate) to break free.
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Picard, realizing that one of the two top officers needs to keep hold of his
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sanity, sends Riker off to a nap. Unfortunately, neither one gets any rest:
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Picard hallucinates in the lift and comes to the bridge screaming like a baby,
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and Riker feels snakes on his leg moments after getting into bed. After a
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brief conversation with Data in which Data suggests the deflector burst (a la
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"The Best of Both Worlds") as a possibility, Picard tells Data that he'll need
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to help Picard out more and more as this continues.
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After Bev has a brief hallucination, she figures out what's wrong: except for
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Troi, no one has had any dreams since this began, and the dream-deprivation is
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driving them all slowly insane. As unrest builds in Ten-Forward (with a
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crewman, Gillespie, deciding he'd rather go down fighting than quietly in his
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room), the deflector burst is tried, and fails miserably. After this, Worf,
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feeling that his fear makes him no longer a warrior, tries to commit suicide,
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but Troi stops him and takes him to sickbay.
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Finally, after Data's been appointed Acting Captain, Troi figures out that her
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nightmares are not dreams, but _messages_. There's another ship on the other
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side of the rift, and its beings are trying to communicate telepathically on
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Troi's mental frequency (thus jamming out all humanoid REM frequencies at the
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same time). After some study and a bit of good fortune, Troi and Data realize
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that the other crew needs hydrogen from the Enterprise in order to create the
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necessary explosion. As Data does this, Troi communicates to the aliens that
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they should release the catalyst, and both ships are freed.
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Hey, now that was nice and short. Now, onwards to some comments:
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First, the major flaw, so I can get it out of the way and talk about good
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things. The Enterprise needed an explosion, right? Er, guys--there's a WHOLE
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SHIP right outside for you to blow up (with a torpedo, if nothing else)! Now,
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it's quite possible that it may not have worked, but it should have been
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thought of. And while the REM-deficiency might have made Picard or Riker or
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Worf punchy enough not to think of it, Data has no such excuse. Bad, BAD
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problem--because that gets you out of the hole right there.
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But apart from that, I was quite pleased. To be more specific, I very much
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enjoyed the whole creepy atmosphere of the whole thing. (Of course, it helps
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that a very jumpy friend of mine was in town for this one...:-) :-) ). I
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almost expected to see that Rob Bowman had directed this one. He didn't--Les
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Landau, of "Sins of the Father" and "Family" fame, did, but he did a good job
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with it.
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Also, for once, for bleeding ONCE, Marina Sirtis turned in a standout Deanna
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Troi. This is quite possibly the only time in TNG history that Troi has been
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feeling pain/nervousness/etc. and NOT gone into screaming ninny mode. Rather
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the reverse--she looked like hell at the end, but still had her wits about
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her, flustered though they were. Bev was far more hysterical than Troi was
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(which makes sense, too, since she was hallucinating and Troi wasn't); and
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Gates did almost as good a job as Marina this time 'round. Kudos to the two
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usual weak links.
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But just about everybody else was terrific, too. Riker and Data were fine, if
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nonexceptional. Worf's one major scene was very well played--it was
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interesting to finally hear Mike Dorn put something other than anger and
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annoyance into his voice, and it worked for me. And Picard--oh, Picard.
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Damn, but Patrick Stewart is good at looking haggard when he needs to. And
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boy oh boy, he did not look at _all_ good by the end of all this. The major
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weak link was probably Keiko, who wasn't particularly interesting in her 2
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minutes of screen time (although I rather enjoyed O'Brien's scene in
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Ten-Forward right afterward). Guinan had some good moments, too, particularly
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her last scene--but that's unexpected enough that I won't say much about it.
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(I will say that it worked for me. Hell, doesn't EVERY bartender have a gun
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stashed under the bar? :-) )
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Let's see...what else...hmm. Technical was fine--I found the music well above
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the norm this week, particularly near the end (reminded me a little of the
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close of "The Battle", actually), and it was nice to see the Brittaine, not to
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mention some terrific shots of the Enterprise every so often. I'm sure there
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will be some comments on the "mental frequency" bit, though, so let me add
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something quickly on that:
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Yes, it's probably stretching the point a bit. I'm not a biologist (although
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my fiancee is, and she was uneasy about the concept), but it might be iffy.
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However, without definite evidence that it was WRONG, I can go with it. In
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particular, I can go with it because if you believe that there is some sort of
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"fundamental frequency" for REM brainwaves, everything else they used in the
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show follows nicely. One small stretch works for me, as long as everything
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else doesn't require any greater ones.
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Well, I think that may be about it. This is rather shorter than usual, but
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(a) I've got a very early plane to catch tomorrow morning, and (b) my body's
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finally decided to let itself catch all the diseases I couldn't get last week
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during finals, so I'm beat. Anyway, I'd definitely say it's worth
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seeing--just forget that there's another ship there, and you're fine. :-)
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The numbers, then:
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Plot: 5. The "blow up the ship" concept really hurt here.
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Plot Handling: 9.5. Majorly creepy, precisely as intended. It only misses
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the 10 because it automatically invites comparison to MASH's "dream"
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episode, which nothing beats. :-)
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Characterization: 10. Awfully nice--when even Marina turns in a standout
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performance, something's gotta be right...
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Technical: 9. Nice-looking stuff, and not bad on the science.
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TOTAL: 33.5/4 ---> 8.5. Not too shabby...not too shabby indeed.
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NEXT WEEK:
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Geordi might end up as a big blue glowing thingy. I'm frightened. :-)
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Later, folks.
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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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"Snakes...why did it have to be snakes?"
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--if you can't place this, too damn bad :-)
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--
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Copyright 1991, Timothy W. Lynch. All rights reserved, but feel free to ask...
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