215 lines
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215 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
WARNING: The following article contains spoiler information regarding this
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week's TNG episode, "Silicon Avatar". Those not wishing details surrounding
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the show's plot, mood, characters, events, and small fish named Ethel should
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perhaps consider moving on to another post at this time.
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Well, *I'm* depressed.
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Talk about your depressing endings...masterfully manipulated in that regard
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(and a few others, though not all). More, after this synopsis from your local
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station (well, okay, me):
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While Riker, Data, and Bev are visiting the Melona Four colony, the
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Crystalline Entity appears and utterly destroys it, although all but two of
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the colonists are saved. The Enterprise is sent to track the Entity down,
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with the help of xenologist Kyla Marr--a woman who, although capable, has no
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trust for Data, due to Lore's previous assistance given to the Entity in the
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past. Picard, realizing that if her attitude will be a problem, it's best to
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know early, assigns her to work with Data in nearly every detail.
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She doesn't take to it well initially--she accuses him of collaborating with
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the Entity (thus "explaining" why this group of colonists wasn't killed like
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all the other attacks in 20-plus years), and reveals that her interest in the
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Entity began when her son was killed at Omicron Theta (Data's homeworld).
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However, after Data has provided help in several occasions (including finding
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a way to track the Entity by a method Dr. Marr had overlooked), she appears to
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realize that he really *isn't* much like Lore.
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As the Enterprise follows the Entity (which is apparently headed for the
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Brechtian cluster), Picard has to point out to Marr that the intent is *not*
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to kill the Entity unless they absolutely have to--he'd prefer to find a way
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to communicate with it, and see if its needs can be supplied in some other
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way. Marr is understandably skeptical, but agrees to work with Data to find a
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method of communication.
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They find one--and Marr further finds that through Data's programmed memories
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and experiences of the Omicron Theta colony, she can, in some respects, hear
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her son again. (After the Entity captures and "consumes" the inhabitants of
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another ship, Data reads one of her son's journal entries aloud in his voice,
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bringing tears to Marr's eyes.)
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They eventually find the Entity and begin broadcasting a series of graviton
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pulses to it. It appears to respond, and emits a pattern which is almost
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undoubtedly a sign of intelligence, although they cannot yet decipher what the
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pattern of pulses means. Picard is elated--but then Marr, who wrote most of
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the program, alters it to emit a _continuous_ pulse of gravitons with rapidly
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increasing amplitude, and locks the program in such a way that neither Data
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nor Geordi can stop the emission before the Entity is shattered.
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Data takes Marr back to her quarters, her mind virtually snapped. She asks
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"Rennie", through Data, to tell her that he understands she did it for him.
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Data demurs: from what he knows of her son through his journals and vivid
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memories, he believes Rennie would be very sad at the loss of both the Entity
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and of his mother's brilliant career.
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That should do. (Yes, it's a bit shorter than usual--I think it was a little
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more easily summarized than most. Besides, I'm tired. :-) ) Now, on to some
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comments.
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It's an interesting situation when the alleged blockbuster of "Redemption II"
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(which, although riddled with holes and annoyances, did provide an interesting
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enough ride that it got a 6.5) is the worst show of the season. But so far,
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that seems to be the case--this was a pretty solid outing.
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I'll get the gripes out of the way first, I think. So...
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First, I'm a little bit annoyed that we rarely, if *ever*, see a scientist who
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isn't somehow obsessed, or overbearing, or some other form of bad guy. It's
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analogous to the "Admirals are all idiots" syndrome, but I don't mind that
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one. I do mind this one--we're not *all* like that, after all! (I make no
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claims as to which category I fall into, however. :-) ) That's just a
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general gripe--Marr was written well enough that I'm willing to overlook it in
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this case. But I *do* wish we'd see some non-Enterprise scientists who
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weren't so unlikeable (when the first three I can think of are Marr,
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"Evolution"'s Dr. Stubbs, and "Where No One Has Gone Before"'s Kosinski,
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there's a clear trend).
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Along vaguely similar lines--although Marr was a well-written and
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well-motivated character (a bit of a surprise, actually; I didn't think so at
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all in her first few scenes, but most or all of it was set right), Ellen
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Geer's performance occasionally didn't hit things quite right. Most of her
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"hostile" scenes in the second act didn't feel quite right to me, despite the
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fact that they made perfect sense in context. And her final appeal to
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"Rennie" was ever so slightly too over-the-top for me. It's a minor
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point--her more important scenes (those in Data's quarters, and her final one
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on the bridge) were well-played, and that's what really counts. But it's
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worth mentioning.
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Finally, I'm unsure about the Treknological aspects of the show. First of
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all, gamma rays are *not* in the 10 keV range--that's X-rays. Second, I don't
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believe proton-antiproton annihilation will make emissions at that
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frequency--but I'm not at all sure about that, and I'm sure someone more
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experienced can correct me on that. The prospect of using gravitons seems
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marginally titchy, since I believe gravitons are theorized to move only at c
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(i.e. they wouldn't work if you're broadcasting to something a few light-years
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away), but since we know so little about them (like, we've yet to *actually
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see one* :-) ), I'm not sweating that much.
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Major plot problem: the only other time we saw the Entity, Lore *was
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communicating with it*--and it was clear that the Entity understood in
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"Datalore", based on its actions early in its appearance. This is a huge bit
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of retconning that makes much of "Datalore" somewhat difficult to explain, and
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I don't like it. I'm sure they could have come up with *something* to make
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both fit (and I'm sure r.a.s. will before too long :-) ), but it needed to be
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done. That's really my only strong objection to the show.
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Now, on to some of the good points.
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After two weeks of railing about Riker acting like a bozo (and a week before
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where he got virtually no air time in an allegedly important role), it was
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refreshing to see Riker done right. Yes, he was flirting outrageously with
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Carmen in the teaser (if you haven't seen the show yet, the details of the
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colony's destruction are *far* more extensive than I gave in the synopsis, and
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are well done)--but it felt human for once. (In fact, I *actually* found
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myself thinking a bit of Hawkeye Pierce in that scene, and Hawkeye almost sets
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the standard for TV flirting. :-) ) His actions throughout the Entity's
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attack on the colony were precisely as required, and were well played--it's
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not often that I manage to empathize with Frakes's portrayal, but I did
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here, both when Carmen was killed off and when he and Data emerge from the
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cave to see the absolute wasteland that the colony has become...brr. Finally,
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Riker took *exactly* the right tone when he was questioning whether they
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perhaps *should* just kill the Entity--right down to ever so slightly
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bristling when Picard suggested he was acting for personal reasons. A rare
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congratulations to Frakes for a superb job this go-round.
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It was also nice to see them make good work out of a development I don't
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particularly care for, i.e. Data's professed complete lack of emotions. Based
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on his actions in past shows ("The Measure of a Man", for instance), I don't
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believe that it's particularly apt, but it was put to good use here. Only
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someone as unfeeling as Data could avoid reacting to Marr's accusations
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initially, and only someone as unfeeling as Data could have delivered a
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condemnation such as the one Marr got at the end. Beautiful.
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And this was definitely one of Cliff Bole's better directing jobs. While I do
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tend to get into the show, it's rare that I have much of an emotional reaction
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to it. Two different scenes managed to evoke precisely what the writers
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intended--absolute shock and dismay at the scene of the ravaged colony (I'm
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reminded of the current cover to Donaldson's _The Wounded Land_
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there...obligatory Donaldson reference :-) ), and feeling Marr's pain when
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hearing her son's journal in his voice. It wasn't all Bole's doing--in part,
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one of the reasons the former scene worked so well was that Riker looked
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_convincingly_ stricken by it, and another was the music there. But Bole was
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responsible for much of it, no doubt. Nice work.
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As to that music...it's definitely time to give Jay Chattaway as much work as
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he can handle. First, he does a memorable job on "Darmok"; now, this. His
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piece at the sight of the ravaged colony is probably the most powerful, and
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vivid, piece I've heard from TNG since the sighting of the Borg ship in
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BOBW1--enough so that it took a conscious effort of will not to stand. If he
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keeps this up, I'm going to have to start agreeing with people who're bored by
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the music from TNG's other musicmakers, since this is just so far above the
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rest. (He's no James Horner or John Williams yet, but he's definitely doing a
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solid job.)
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The effects were generally excellent. There was one exception--the "shaking"
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in the cave when the Entity attacked outside was pretty cheesy (reminded me of
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"Devil's Due", in fact--and that's not a memory I cherish :-) ). But the
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shots of the Entity were breathtaking, particularly those in the teaser--both
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beautiful and menacing at the same time. Computer-generated effects or no, it
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was a vivid image.
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Let's see...what else is there. Oh, yes, Dr. Marr. As I said, I didn't find
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her all that believable _initially_--and I didn't buy her sudden "okay, fine,
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everyone's terrific--Data, the Entity, everything" conversion. However, the
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conversion _wasn't_ quite legit--the part with Data was (and was not a part I
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objected to), but she'd simply changed towards the Entity in order to better
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have access to destroy it. Her clear obsession about her son was built up
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rather slowly--nicely done, since that's the sort of thing that can *very*
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easily be made a rotten plotline. About the only scene I didn't eventually
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accept was her initial arrival--it was necessary to show how strong she was
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there to show just how much she crumbles at the end, yes, but I couldn't
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swallow it. She *almost* makes up for it with her offhand "of course, the
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last person [her son] would tell [about a girlfriend] would be his mother,"
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though. :-)
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A few random notes:
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--Nice use of Data's programmed memories. If there was ever a time and a way
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to use them, this was it--it makes perfect sense that someone with a relative
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at the colony should be avidly curious.
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--So there's "no predetermined limit" on Data's existence, eh? I'm sure they
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didn't actually *intend* for this to impact on those who just saw the
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director's cut of "Blade Runner" in LA over the past few weeks, but...:-)
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--Picard's "remarkable", complete with raised eyebrow. I think that's the
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most Vulcan I have *ever* seen our friend the Captain. Interesting image.
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So, that would seem to do it. Not quite a perfect outing, but a very strong
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one. So, Da Numbers:
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Plot: 7. It would've been an airtight 10, but for the "how the HELL did Lore
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talk to it, then?" retcon.
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Plot Handling: 10. Bliss.
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Characterization: 9. A bit off for some of Marr's less believable moments,
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but apart from that, everyone was in character, and *well* in
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character.
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TOTAL: 9.5, upping quite a bit for music/FX. Good work, guys.
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NEXT WEEK:
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"Disaster" strikes the Enterprise. I really hope those are the worst scenes,
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'cos if they're the best...
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Evenin', all.
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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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"Travel...Arrival...years of an inch and a step toward a source..."
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--Suzanne Vega, "Pilgrimage"
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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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