204 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
204 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
WARNING: The following article contains spoiler information about this week's
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TNG episode, "In Theory". You should know the scoop by now: don't go any
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further if you don't know or want to know what happens.
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Hmm. Hardly thrilling, but a decent way to spend an hour. Quite watchable.
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I have a feeling that if you boil the whole review down to a sentence or two,
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that's gonna be it. It could've been better, but it was pretty good. At any
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rate, here's a patented Tim Lynch Plot Synopsis :-) :
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The Enterprise is exploring the Mare Oscurum, a "dark matter nebula," and Data
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is working extensively with his friend Jenna DeSora. Jenna's just come out of
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a lousy relationship, and Data appears to be everything she wants: kind,
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attentive, solicitous, handsome..."perfect," despite his lack of emotions.
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During one work session, she kisses him right before she leaves, leaving Data
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quite puzzled.
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As the Enterprise heads into the nebula (which is of much higher density than
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past examples they've seen) to examine a class-M planet they've detected, Data
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asks many people for advice on whether to pursue a relationship with Jenna.
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Guinan says she doesn't like to give advice on first relationships. Geordi
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says his advice is "find someone else to give you advice." Troi cautions him
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to be _very_ careful, as Jenna could really get hurt, but then says that if he
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tries, he'll have to be more than the sum of his programming. Worf tells him
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to "conquer", not "pursue", but cautions that he doesn't want Jenna (who's in
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his section) mistreated. Riker tells him of wonderful rewards, and tells him
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to go for it. After all that, Data appears at Jenna's door with flowers. His
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initial attempts are somewhat...unsubtle...but Jenna realizes he's trying his
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best and lets herself be drawn in.
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While Jenna tutors Data in the finer points of a relationship, the Enterprise
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crew begins to discover a few problems. At first, they're minor: Data's cat
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got out of his quarters and shouldn't have been able to, and Picard finds his
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ready room's computer console under his desk and in pieces. Things get
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stranger still when they finally reach the location of the class-M planet, and
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find nothing at all--especially when moments later, it's there again.
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Suddenly, there's a brief bout of atmospheric decompression in the observation
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lounge, but no apparent hull breach. Once standard pressure is restored, they
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go have a look and find no trace of what caused the damage, except for a few
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tiny electric current in the windows, which are often evidence of a subspace
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distortion.
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After Jenna gets a little unnerved by Data's precisely calculated
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solicitousness, and then his forced and deliberate "lovers' quarrel," Picard
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decides enough is enough with these incidents (since more have occurred, but
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none causing any injuries yet), and decides to analyze them from outside the
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nebula. Unfortunately, before they can leave, a few more problems occur: a
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science station blows out, then an engineering station. A structural failure
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is detected between two decks, but when Geordi sends out a team, he quickly
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finds that one of the members fell halfway through the deck, which then
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resolidified, killing her instantly.
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Data's figured out the problem: the high density of dark matter has caused
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minor gaps in space, which are drifting randomly and causing major havoc
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whenever they "blip" into this space. Sensors can be tuned to detect them,
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but only at ranges close enough that the ship could never get out of the way
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in time. Picard, in a shuttle, flies ahead to do so. The shuttle is
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eventually destroyed, but Picard is rescued and they got far enough out that
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they make a successful run out of the nebula. Finally, Jenna realizes that
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she's just repeating her old patterns (breaking up with one unemotional man
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only to get together with another), and severs her and Data's relationship.
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Hmm. Well, I guess that'll do. Anyway, on to some commentary.
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This was...okay. Not fantastic, but okay. I'm starting to think that
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TNG should really steer clear of shows with two main, unlinked plots, though,
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'cos they're really inferior compared to most of the single-plot shows (like
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last week's "The Mind's Eye", for example). Granted, I'm coming off of the
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high of "The Mind's Eye," and gearing up for "Redemption" in two weeks, so
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this is easily falling into the trap of being something to look at while
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waiting for the "good stuff", but I think there's more to it than that.
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First, the good stuff. Both plots were probably a bit better than they had
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any right to be. The "Data tries romance" plot is something that could have
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been absolutely AWFUL, and much of it really wasn't. The "dark matter rifts
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from hell" plot also managed to evoke shades of "Clues" in the early parts,
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and of "Booby Trap" at the end. Both are good things to remind one of in my
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opinion.
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First, the dark matter plot. I just know that all the scientific sticklers
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will be blasting the whole concept to smithereens this week, and to be honest
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I'm a little less tolerant of this idea than many of the others TNG has used.
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Granted, dark matter is one of these nifty astronomical concepts that at the
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moment can be almost anything (trust me...I'm in cosmology; I hear about it
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all the time...:-) ); but somehow I have problems believing that causing
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spatial ripples of THAT form is one of them. (It's the drifting in and out of
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this reality that gave me the trouble, actually; if they were talking about a
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bunch of mini-black holes drifting around and causing havoc, that might make
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perfect sense.)
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But if you can get around that and accept it, much of the rest works. I was
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happy to see that the damage was being caused by something that was simply a
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natural effect of unexplored space, and NOT some sentient being for once. I
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thought that putting Picard in the shuttle was an incredibly contrived idea (I
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mean, neither Picard NOR Riker is all that expendable--put someone in there
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whose primary training has been as a shuttle pilot! They do have some,
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right?), but once he was in the actual escape sequence itself was pretty
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gripping. Something of a mixed bag.
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It was, however, handled very nicely once you steered around the plot holes I
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mentioned. For a rookie director, Stewart did pretty well, particularly in
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that escape sequence I mentioned. ("Now would be a good time, Mr.
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O'Brien"...:-) ) I don't think he quite did as good a job on this outing as
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Frakes did with his debut in "The Offspring", and he certainly didn't pull the
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masterful job that David Livingston did last week, but he certainly showed
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some promise. (One shot in particular stood out, but it was in the other
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plot, so I'll get to it later.)
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Now, for the Data/romance plot. The plot itself was tight, in that I don't
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think it really had any holes to speak of, but I don't think this one was
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handled all that well in a few places. Two of the longer scenes in this
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plotline, the initial seduction and the "lovers' quarrel" scene, were
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extraordinarily awkward to watch. I realize that they were supposed to be
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uncomfortable (that was, after all, the point), but this time I'm on the other
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side of the fence I was on in "Galaxy's Child": I couldn't get past my
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discomfort enough to get into theirs. This was especially true for the whole
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"lovers' tiff" bit; I realize that a lot of the show was somewhat lighthearted
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(and pleasantly so after last week's white-knuckler), but Brent did a little
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too much schtick there and not enough Data. (The most interesting part of
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that was that he sounded and acted a bit like Lore, right down to the singing.
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Hmm...are we seeing a slight progression of character, or simply a limit to
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Brent Spiner's range? Hopefully the former.)
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Some of that storyline was quite wonderful, however. The sequence of Data
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asking for advice from everyone was wonderful--it reminded me of Wes doing the
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same in "The Dauphin", which was just about the only part of that show I
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really enjoyed. Everyone seemed to work pretty well and in character in this;
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okay, who else was shouting "Lech! Lech!" at Riker by the end of that
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sequence? Time for Bev to surgically remove that smirk. :-) And the one
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shot I absolutely loved of that whole sequence was Picard's little "oh, Lord,
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he's finally found me" look when Data comes to ask him for advice; that whole
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sequence was probably the highlight of the show. ("Captain, I would like to
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ask--" "Yes, I've heard, Data. And I will be delighted to offer any advice I
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can on understanding women. [disgruntled look] When I have some, I'll let
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you know." Hee-hee!)
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Characterization was actually the best part of the whole show. Jenna seemed
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fairly well done (at least, she certainly got across to me that she'd just
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finished a bad relationship), and this was the first time I've really enjoyed
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a scene with Keiko and O'Brien as a married couple. Picard's bit above was
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not just good direction--it was also very proper Picard. The only character
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whom I thought was a little overdone (apart from Data in one or two scenes)
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was Worf, in Picard's ready room. His not agreeing with or understanding
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Picard's lightheartedness about the "perhaps we have a poltergeist!" was fine,
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but I thought he was just a bit too paranoid. Ah, well.
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Effects- and music-wise, I have virtually no complaints. In fact, the shots
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of the Enterprise in the nebula (particularly of it swooping along behind the
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shuttle) were among the best shots of the _ship_ I've seen in a long time.
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The music was again done by Jay Chattaway, who did the rather nice music for
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"The Host", which was a little more attention-grabbing than most. (The music
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when Picard first discovers his ready room problems in particular made me sit
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up and take notice, but most of it was actually pretty decent.)
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A few small comments:
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--The return of Data's cat. Spot the Kitty--sounds like the sort of game show
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you'd find on Monty Python. :-) Seriously, I'm always glad to see the cat.
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And the small "hello, Spot!" at the end of the show was actually a nice sad
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little finish. (Data clearly doesn't know enough about cats, though, if he
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seriously expects such a little thing as a locked door to keep Spot inside.
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Doesn't he realize that cats really run the universe? :-) )
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--Only a few seconds of Bev, and that only down to a little past
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shoulder-level. Guess Gates is really starting to show. That's a pity,
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because I think she'd have some interesting words on love and relationships
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for Data, between Jack and Odan.
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--"Honey, I'm home!" ??? Between this and "Dinosaurs", that phrase is
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suddenly getting a new surge.
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--Before anyone goes crying that Geordi seemed way too cheerful for someone
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who was just conditioned in the last show, check the stardate. If 1 SD = 1
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day, we are talking a month here, so it shouldn't be weighing on his mind
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every minute any more. (If he ran across some Romulans and didn't react
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accordingly, however, that's a far different story, of course.)
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Well, that should just about finish that up. In sum, it wasn't a bad way to
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spend an hour. It was hardly one of the best shows of the season, but it was
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pleasant, usually humorous, and only had a couple of scenes which made me
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cringe. (Why do I suspect, though, that the opinions on this show are going
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to run the entire spectrum?)
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The numbers:
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Plot: 6. Data gets 8, the dark matter gets 4.
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Plot Handling: 6. That's what both get.
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Characterization: 9. Pretty good.
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TOTAL: 7.5, with a half-point for good visuals and music. Could be a lot
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worse.
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NEXT WEEK: A rerun of Devil's Due. I think I'll just tune in for the preview
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for "Redemption", thank you very much.
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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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"The cat's out of the bag."
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"Spot?"
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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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