220 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
220 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
WARNING: The following article contains spoiler information about this week's
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TNG episode, "Qpid". So if you don't want spoilers, don't read it until
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they're not spoilers anymore...:-)
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They didn't really mean to make this one, did they?
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Yech. Not a pleasant experience for the most part. They've finally made a Q
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episode I dislike. Damn. But anyway, before I rant on too much, here's a
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synop:
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After working for hours on a keynote address to the Federation Archaeology
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Council symposium that he must deliver, Picard goes to his quarters to get
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some rest, but finds a surprise waiting for him--flowers, a card, a horgon,
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and Vash.
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Everything seems fine at first, but Vash soon discovers that Picard plans to
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keep his public dealings with her strictly platonic, and further finds that he
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has never mentioned her or their adventures together to any of the bridge
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crew. Eventually, at the pre-conference reception, she confronts him about
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this. When he tells her that he feels it would have been "inappropriate" to
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mention her, she nastily apologizes for causing him so much embarrassment, and
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stalks off. Picard, already in a lousy mood, goes to his ready room--where he
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finds Q sitting in his chair, and grinning from ear to ear.
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Q has returned, or so he says, to repay an old debt. Picard's attempt to
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rescue Q last time they met left him owing Picard something, and he wants to
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do something nice in return. Picard, however, will have none of it, and
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refuses his every offer. Q, annoyed, leaves.
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After another fight with Vash, Picard is not happy, and becomes even less so
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when Q arrives later that evening and taunts him about having been made so
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vulnerable by a woman. He says that his gift should be to remove this
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weakness, but Picard angrily refuses. When Picard says that yes, he would
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have Q stand idly by while Vash "led him to his destruction", Q smirks and
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vanishes.
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Q's plan becomes apparent, however, when during Picard's speech, the entire
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bridge crew vanishes, only to reappear in Sherwood Forest, appropriately
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garbed. Riker is cast as Little John, Data as Friar Tuck, Picard as Robin
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Hood...and as Q (as the Sheriff of Nottingham) gleefully comments, Vash, or
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Maid Marian, is to be put to death in Nottingham Castle at midday the next
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day. Picard is faced with a choice: risk his bridge crew or live with Vash's
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death.
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Although Vash, confused by her situation, tries to salvage it by agreeing to
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marry Sir Guy, Picard soon appears (having come alone by his own choice) to
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save her. When she hears he has come alone, however, she refuses to go with
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him, and their bickering continues until guards burst into "Marian"'s tower.
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Before Picard can begin to fight, Vash takes his sword and captures "Robin"
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herself, giving him as a wedding gift to Sir Guy. (She too, however, ends up
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under a death sentence when Q discovers and calls attention to her hurried
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note to Riker and the Merry Men asking them to come save Picard.)
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Riker and the others, not willing to stand idly by under any circumstances,
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show up in the nick of time to save Picard and Vash from the chopping block.
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"Robin" kills Sir Guy and rescues Maid Marian, and after Q observes that
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love brings out the worst in Picard (a statement Vash angrily protests), he
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sends everyone back except Vash. A short time later, though, Vash appears to
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say goodbye: she's taken on Q as a partner, and they'll explore the universe
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together.
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There we are. Now, on to commentary:
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I've thought about it, and hours later, I've _still_ to see the point behind
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this show. It doesn't seem to have had anything to say, or indeed any
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coherence whatsoever. That's not a good sign. There really were very few
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good signs here at all, in fact.
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One objection of mine was that this show put Q in a rut. One big reason I've
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enjoyed every Q episode to date (excepting "Encounter at Farpoint") is that
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each time, the spin on the character has been different. In "Hide and Q", we
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first got a glimpse that he wasn't the only one of his kind, and gained a hint
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of his devious nature. "Q Who" showed a terrifying Q, representing precisely
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those unknowns that are most dangerous. "Deja Q", on the other hand, showed
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the absurd side of Q and his existence, and also a hint of his vulnerability
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when turned mortal. "Qpid" didn't do anything new with the character, and in
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fact reversed his development significantly in my opinion. ("Deja Q" showed
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that perhaps Q had matured just a little, from early adolescence in Farpoint
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to late adolescence. "Qpid" had him back to around age 10, I
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think...certainly still in the "girls have cooties" stage. Blech.)
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A related objection there is that Q *has a past*, and it was pretty much
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ignored entirely. Remember, Q was in a way indirectly responsible for
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Picard's alteration by the Borg, since he is the one that brought the two
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cultures together in the first place. For Picard to see Q and not immediately
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think "you bastard, you nearly managed to steal away my SOUL!" is hard to
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believe. For Picard to not think that at ALL is stupid beyond belief. (Given
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the really poor handling of Q here, I found it very difficult to believe that
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this character was the same one who once told Picard "the auditorium's been
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rented, the orchestra engaged...it's now time to see if you can _dance.")
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I mourn the complete mangling of a previously enjoyable character. (It's not
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beyond redemption--just take us to the Qontinuum next time, dammit!)
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I have no such mournful sentiments toward Vash, because I never liked her in
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the first place. I loathed her in "Captain's Holiday", and I loathed her
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here. If they'd given her an actual character and stuck to it, it _might_
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have had some chance of working, but to give her this pool of disjointed
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scenes and actions to play with was a really rotten move. Yech.
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In addition, as long as we're on the subject, I thought that this show was
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schizophrenic in a way. It was allegedly about Picard and about his dealings
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with Q and Vash, right? Then why did we see so much of Vash: why was every
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scene with her in it carefully arranged to show us just what a "stunning babe"
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Jennifer Hetrick is, and not to actually do little things like tell us
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anything? Her slinking into the captain's chair, the direction as "Robin"
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picked up "Marian" then swiveled a full 360 degrees as the guards came in, and
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so on--all of them seemed to me to be little more than showing off various
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features of Ms. Hetrick. Sorry, but that's not what I'm watching the show
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for, guys.
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The really depressing thing is that the show didn't HAVE to be as bad as it
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was. There were several different occasions where the show might have
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redeemed itself, if only it had followed little scene X up, or had had
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character Y do something that wasn't 100% formulaic. For several zillion
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examples:
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--The show COULD have been played straight, dealing with the problems that
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happen when a shorebound fling comes back demanding attention. It looked for
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a few minutes (during Vash's initial argument with Picard) like they were
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going to do that, but it was not to be. Instead, they made it a mix of
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bickering between the two of them which I could not possibly see Picard doing
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unless drugged and of meaningless playing around with costumes. Yech. (The
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only good thing about this point is that it means there's still room for a
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decent story which does deal with the above problems, which a friend of mine
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is currently writing.)
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--It's been shown enough times that Q really doesn't know how the hell humans
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think. They could have made Vash's abrupt agreement to marry Guy _really_
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throw him, which at least might have changed something for the better.
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--They could have had the guts to make Vash completely unscrupulous (which is
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how I saw her in "Captain's Holiday". They could have set it up so that she
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really DIDN'T care all that much for Picard, and made her capture of "Robin" a
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sincere one. But no--she's got to deep down be a decent person who really
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does care for Picard. Give me a break.
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--They could have actually had Vash go with Picard the first time he tried to
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rescue her. It would've changed things a lot, but even a long, not all that
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interesting chase sequence would've been miles better than what we were fed.
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--It looked like Bev and Vash were getting along so well, we could have had
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fun with the two of them teaming up against Picard. That would've been
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strictly for laughs, but it could have been fun.
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That should do for starters. Other negative points:
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--Sexism at Paramount strikes again. In the final battle sequence, Riker,
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Geordi, Worf, and Data (and Picard, of course) draw swords and come out
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swinging. What do the women do? Vash gets taken to the tower and squeaks a
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lot, and Bev and Deanna get to bash people on the heads with vases. Spare me.
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--A few alleged "comic relief" scenes that quite honestly rank up there with
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the STUPIDEST scenes I've ever seen on TNG. First, we had Worf's smashing of
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Geordi's mandolin, complete with "Sorry." right afterwards. Sorry to break it
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to Ira Steven Behr (the guy who wrote the teleplay--and he also did the one
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for "Yesterday's Enterprise", so he should KNOW better!), but "Animal House"
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has already done that, and far better than here. Then, we had Deanna shooting
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Data with an arrow. Bo-ring; and also dead wrong, since it's been established
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way back since "The Naked Now" that he will at the very least LEAK.
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--Just about everybody acted way too stereotypical. Sure, Picard's sometimes
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stiff, but I have NEVER seen him as brusque as he was in the early parts of
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the show. (Nor have I ever seen him to be so ignorantly trusting as to take
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Vash's appearance at face value--I think Stewart just wanted to arrange it so
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he had as many chances to lip-mash with Hetrick as possible.) Worf was lousy
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as well--he managed to be funny in "Deja Q" without going out of character, so
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why did he have to have horrible lines like "I am NOT a MERRY MAN!" and "Nice
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legs. [...] For a human."? Yech. The only character who seemed decently
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done was Riker, and that's because he only had about 5 lines.
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--Although I enjoyed the big climactic sword-fight well enough, I thought the
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dialogue was pretty atrocious.
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There were a few minor good points, however. While most of the one-liners
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were ones I didn't care for in the least, there were a couple of good moments,
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such as:
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--Riker's attempt to hit on Vash. So Picard does a good Riker-imitation, huh?
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THAT I would have liked to see...:-)
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--Picard's exchange with Riker right after Q first leaves. This was the high
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point of the show for me: "Q? Any idea what he was up to?" "He wants to do
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something _nice_ for me." "I'll alert the crew." That was great fun. :-)
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--One really nice, sort of technical effect: the galloping of Q's horse is
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heard long before Q and the horse actually flash into existence. That was
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nice. (The flash was used entirely too many times, though, and I thought Q's
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poking his head through Vash's wall was useless.)
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--As I said, I enjoyed the sword-fight. It wasn't on "Princess Bride" level
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or anything, but it'll do well enough, and it did look like an excuse for most
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of the regular cast to run around and have the time of their lives, which
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should be worth something. :-)
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That's about it, though. I'm sure there are some people who are going to like
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this; I suspect it will be the same people who laughed uproariously at
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"Captain's Holiday" and "Menage a Troi". I loathed both, and this is no
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exception. Sigh. Anyway, here's the wrapup:
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Plot: 1. A little bit of potential, but not much more.
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Plot Handling: 0. COMPLETELY bungled.
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Characterization: 1. Riker was fine, everyone else was crap.
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Technical: 4. It's that high for the gallop--I didn't find the medieval
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setting believable or interesting, and the Q-effects are growing tiresome.
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TOTAL: 1.5. Now *that*'s poor. Easily the worst of this season, and
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probably in my bottom 5. Yech.
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NEXT WEEK:
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Sabotage on the Enterprise, and Picard caught in the ensuing witch-hunt.
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Could be interesting...
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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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"He wants to do something nice for me."
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"I'll alert the crew."
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