228 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
228 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
WARNING: This article contains spoiler information regarding this week's TNG
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episode, "The Perfect Mate". Those not wishing to see their perceptions
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mated to these spoilers should get out of the way.
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Hmm. The first third is abominable, but it picks up a *lot* after that.
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I haven't seen a show with such a vast pickup in quality during the actual
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show in a long time. I'd prefer they got it *all* right, of course, but this
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had its moments. More after the synop:
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The Enterprise is ferrying Kriosian ambassador Breeam to a meeting with his
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opposite number, Voltan ambassador Alric, where the two warring systems will
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finally settle their differences on board the Enterprise. Breeam brings
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along some strange cargo, and asks that the cargo bay be kept off limits
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until the meeting. Unfortunately, a pair of Ferengi are "rescued" from a
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damaged ship and attempt to sabotage matters. One tries to talk Breeam into
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giving them trade concessions, while the other sneaks into the cargo bay and
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begins scanning a glowing, floating cocoon.
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Worf and a security team intercept the latter Ferengi, who in falling knocks
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a cargo barrel into the cocoon's supports. As Picard, Riker, and Breeam
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arrive, the cocoon opens, revealing a beautiful woman named Kamala. She
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looks around, approaches Picard, and says, "I am for you, Alric of Volt."
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Breeam corrects her, then hastily justifies the entire situation to Picard
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and Riker. He and Kamala explain that she is a rarity, a female empathic
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metamorph, who unconsciously molds her personality to meet the desires of
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those men around her. Eventually, she will bond to one man, and she has been
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intended since birth to bond to Alric, ending their bitter feud. Riker takes
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her to some quarters, but she quickly turns herself into his ideal woman and
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tries to seduce him.
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The following morning, after being told by a very angry Beverly that Breeam
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has Kamala confined to quarters, Picard goes to see her. She explains that
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her presence could be detrimental to the crew, and when Picard asks her to
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stop changing herself in this way, she explains that it's part and parcel of
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who she is; "one might as well ask a Vulcan to forgo logic." Picard asks her
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what she and other metamorphs do or want when there's no one else to mold to.
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She says, simply, that she's incomplete. Picard leaves, visibly disturbed by
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her forceful approach.
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After initially failing to convince Breeam that she can move freely, Picard
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appoints Data her chaperone. Even Data has his hands full, however, when
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Kamala causes trouble in Ten-Forward with a group of miners. Kamala later
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tells Picard that she thinks she should remain in her quarters, and will--but
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only on the condition that he visit. Picard first demurs, then becomes
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fascinated when she shows a sudden interest in and knowledge of archaeology.
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Panicking at his own interest, Picard attempts to convince her that he's
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really a very dull fellow. She doesn't believe him, but he manages to make
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his refusal stick.
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However, shortly thereafter, the Ferengi's attempt to bribe Breeam results in
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Breeam being severely injured. The Ferengi are sent to a nearby Starbase,
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but now the negotiations are in jeopardy. A delay is not possible, since
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Kamala's ability to permanently bond does not last long, and Picard is put in
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the position of having to conclude the negotiations--and worse yet, work
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closely with Kamala for days in preparing for them.
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They become closer over those days, and Kamala admits that until this voyage,
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she had never been alone at all. She understands her place in history, and
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intends to fulfill it, "but I find it ironic that on the eve of this
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ceremony, which I spent my entire life preparing for, that I should meet a
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man like you." Alric arrives that evening, and is woefully stuffy; by his
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own admission, he's far more interested in the trade agreements between their
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two worlds than he is in Kamala. Picard brings Kamala up to date on the
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arrangements (she is to be presented to Alric the following morning at ten),
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but Kamala asks him not to leave. He tries to simply sit and talk, but
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Kamala draws ever closer, not even entirely knowing why.
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The following morning at tea, a morose Picard bares his soul a bit to
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Beverly. He says that although he realizes she "will change as soon as the
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next man comes in the room...and I find myself hoping the next man won't come
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in." Bev sympathizes, but tells him she doesn't think she can help. Picard
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arrives to escort Kamala, only to have her tell him that she's already
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bonded; to *him*. Regardless, she intends to go ahead with the ceremony;
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being empathic, she can still please Alric and ensure that he never knows.
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Picard gives away the bride, looking rather stricken. Finally, the recovered
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Breeam heads back to his ship--but when he asks Picard how he could possibly
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have resisted her influence, Picard merely tells him to have a safe trip
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home.
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There we are. Now, for some comments:
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As I said at the outset, the beginning of this was *awful*; and I'd be not at
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all surprised to see a lot of people bashing the show to high heaven because
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they couldn't get past the opening fifteen minutes.
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Those minutes had a lot to dislike. Things were rather slow-moving, for one;
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and more importantly, we had the Ferengi as the main villain for the first
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time since the horrible "Menage a Troi". They worked no better here than
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they did there, or even than they did in "The Last Outpost". All the old
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Ferengi cliches that made people say "these guys are a THREAT? They couldn't
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blow their nose and make it dangerous!" were here in spades. (It didn't help
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that one of them was played by Max Grodenchik, the same fellow who played
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Sovak so abominably in "Captain's Holiday".)
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Continuing on, the early Kamala scenes weren't much to sneeze at either. The
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concept of an emotional chameleon (which is essentially what she was) is an
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intriguing one, and offered a lot of questions. At the outset, though, none
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of them seemed to matter a bit. Instead, we had her attempt to seduce Riker,
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which interested me very little. (All right, there was one exception.
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Riker's line right after leaving about "If you need me, I'll be in Holodeck
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Four" had me alternately laughing hard and "ahem!"ing loudly. ;-) ;-) )
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But then, everything changed. Once we got just a few lines into the
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Picard/Bev breakfast scene, I said to myself "Self, this is getting a lot
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better." Beverly's arguments were not wholly unexpected, but well-founded
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and delivered with a *ton* of energy, and so were Picard's. (I loved his
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little "fine, we'll just..." speech.) Interestingly, Bev's arguments get
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even more ironic when we consider that at the end, Kamala is in a situation
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closer to the "virtual prostitution" Bev decries. Initially, she'd have
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molded herself to Alric and been happy doing it; not so by the end.
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And amazingly, Kamala improved tenfold after Picard got involved, too. (I'm
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tempted to think that Famke Janssen is an *acting* metamorph; she molds her
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acting ability to reflect the abilities of those around her. It explains the
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problems with her scene with Frakes, after all. :-) ) A big reason, I
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suspect, is that the tension was no longer quite so sexual; while sexual
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tension can certainly make for good viewing, it can also get overused.
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Kamala's effects on Picard were much more insidious and subtle, and that
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helped a lot. A *lot* a lot.
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The Ten-Forward scene was a mixed bag. I think it could have lost the miners
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without much of a problem at all (though, to be fair, Janssen did a good job
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becoming the stereotypical miners' woman there), but Riker's hasty exit was
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good, and her little exchange of growls with Worf worked better than I
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expected it to.
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Towards the end I had a couple of complaints about Kamala's motivations, but
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in the end they ended up being *answered*, which surprised me to no end.
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To wit, I remember thinking "Okay, I can certainly understand the problems a
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metamorph like this would have being alone, and that makes sense; but there's
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nothing I see here to convince me why *Picard* is the one she'd leap for."
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But in their final exchange, I thought some pretty good grounding for that
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surfaced. Her interest in a man will be a reflection of what sort of person
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that man's desires will turn her *into*; and let's face it, she _was_ a lot
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more interesting (and alluring, methinks) once she went for Picard than in
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any of the other situations. Picard made her more than what she expected to
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be, and that can be very compelling. (It's probably an overt representation
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of what *everybody* wants out of love in the end; to find someone who makes
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you better than you are.)
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THAT I could buy, and it fit perfectly. That helped a great, great deal, and
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let me overlook other minor problems. (Picard's closing lines to the
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ambassador were nicely understated, too.)
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A minor plot concern I had was that Breeam really could have taken better
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precautions, such as sealing up the cocoon in something else, or perhaps
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making sure she's kept in some *other* form of stasis once she emerged. He
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should have prepared for problems such as this one, but I'll forgive that.
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A few things were contrived, most of them involving the Ferengi. There must
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have been better ways both to loose Kamala on the Enterprise and to take
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Breeam out of action than what they found; both of these *screamed* setup.
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And I think the situation Picard and Kamala found themselves in in the end
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was tragic enough that they didn't need to add to it by having Alric be such
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a bozo. In fact, it might have been interesting if he was a fairly good guy,
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just incompatible with Picard (and thus with the final Kamala). The way they
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did it made it too easy.
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But on the whole, if you can get past the first third, the rest is pretty
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good.
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Now, for some short takes:
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--Okay, so last week we had the earthquake towards the end of the show. This
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week, given the circumstances in LA at the time, I fully expected the show to
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be preempted entirely and shown at a later time. Amazingly, it wasn't. It
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wasn't even interrupted beyond the usual commercials, and the newscritters
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just before it made a special point of *promising* the show would air intact.
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Man, the Trek-watching lobby in this area must be a lot stronger than I
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thought. (Fine, so it's not really relevant, but it does make me wonder what
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sort of calamity is going to occur NEXT Wednesday.)
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--The planet from which Breeam and Kamala came is called Krios? As in the
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same Krios that was attempting to secede from the Klingons in "The Mind's
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Eye"? Somehow I suspect this was an accidental duplication.
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--Geordi's "Have you had a chance to see the dolphins yet?" in passing to
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one of the Ferengi was an interesting throwaway line. Guess they really
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ARE taking the Tech Manual seriously. :-)
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--I loved Picard's bit about piano lessons. "I...never liked performing in
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front of an audience." [Picard, perhaps, but not Stewart! :-) ] "Shy?"
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"No. Just not very good!" Heh.
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--It's interesting that a lot of the qualities Kamala seemed to exhibit while
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attracting Picard really *were* similar to the way we're told Vash is.
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Here I saw those traits, though; I never did in her. If Vash had been shown
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like *this*, both "Captain's Holiday" and "Qpid" would have been a lot more
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palatable.
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--Okay, maybe it's just me, but when Kamala started rubbing Picard's head,
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was anyone else suddenly seized with an uncontrollable urge to yell "the orb!
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The orb!" a la "Sleeper"? Ah, well, maybe not. :-)
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--The only bit of music I remember was in the actual wedding ceremony, which
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was quite nice. The rest was pretty standard.
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Anyways, that ought to do it. This turned out a lot better than I expected
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from the preview, and recovered nicely from a brutal first fifteen minutes.
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Not bad at all.
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Da numbers, then:
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Plot: 8. Fairly well thought out and well justified.
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Plot Handling: 4. Waaaaaay too many contrivances, however.
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Characterization: 7. Terrific Picard and late-term Kamala, lousy Alric and
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early-term Kamala, neutral Breeam, and the Ferengi are just plot
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devices and don't count. :-)
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TOTAL: 6.5, rounding up a tick. Not bad; if they'd tightened up the early
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bits, we'd have had an easy 8-9.
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NEXT WEEK:
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Gee, none of MY imaginary friends ever killed anyone...
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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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"When a metamorph shows her interest, you should not take it lightly."
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"Oh, I'm not taking it lightly. I'm just trying...to be as dull as
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possible."
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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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