225 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
225 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
WARNING: The following article contains spoiler information for this week's
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TNG episode, "Violations". Those not wishing to violate the sanctity of an
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unspoiled mind would be advised to not read this just yet.
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Um...what in the world was that?
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I don't know *what* the hell it was, but I don't think it's what I expected.
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Maybe I'll figure it out by the end of the synopsis. Read on, MacDuff:
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The Enterprise is ferrying three Ullians to an "archaeological" mission of
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sorts. They're telepathic, and retrieve other people's memories. The
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eldest, Tarmin, is frequently huffy, overbearing, slightly pushy about his
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talents [attempting to convince both Beverly and Worf to have themselves
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probed, for instance], and extremely talented. At a dinner, he humiliates
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his son Jev's lack of experience. Jev leaves, with Troi following to make
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sure he's all right. They discuss the strategies for dealing with
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overbearing parents [Troi does, after all, have some experience in these
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matters...], and then part on friendly terms.
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As Troi gets ready for bed, however, she has a memory flashback: poker chips
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falling, Will asking her "have you stopped thinking about us?", and her
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attempts to fend off some advances. Suddenly, the scene turns violent--and
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Riker changes into Jev. Vision-Troi screams--and the real Troi slumps to the
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floor in a coma.
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The next morning, Bev's still unable to bring her out of it, and has no clue
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what might have caused it. Thinking that perhaps the Ullians might have
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unintentionally carried something harmful on board, Riker goes to discuss the
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matter with Jev. He's rather blunt about his suspicions, however, and
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brusquely leaves once Jev fully agrees that all three of them will cooperate.
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That night, Riker talks to Deanna and tells her to wake up soon; Beverly
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orders him to bed.
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Then, as Riker's in his quarters, he has a flashback: An emergency of some
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sort in Engineering, involving an isolation door coming down and trapping an
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ensign on the other side. Suddenly, the ensign accusing Riker of "you killed
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her!" turns into Jev, and starts appearing in various locations.
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Vision-Riker looks around, frantic; and the real Riker slumps to his bureau
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in another coma.
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The next day, Beverly's ruled out any known medical cause [the only illness
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that leaves traces similar to what she's found also has other side effects
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which have not appeared]. She puts Geordi to work searching for other
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possible causes of the electropathic activity she's found--and since the
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activity was located in the thalmus [the memory center], she suggests Picard
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once again question the Ullians.
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Tarmin is indignant, but all three again offer their full cooperation in the
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matter. Beverly scans Keiko, who had a memory retrieved by Tarmin days
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earlier, and finds no trace of any abnormal activity. As Geordi's search
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also turns up empty, Bev searches for other causes--and then she has a
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flashback. It's nearly twenty years earlier; she and Jean-Luc are on their
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way to see Jack Crusher's body. Jev slips in and out of Picard's position
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as they approach the body--and as the coverlet is removed, Beverly sees
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Jev/Jack open his eyes and stare back at her. Vision-Beverly screams: and
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by the time Geordi and Data report to her, she's slumped at her desk in yet
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another coma.
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Picard orders Geordi and Data to search the records of the previous planets
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visited by the Ullians during this mission, and then asks the Ullians to
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voluntarily confine themselves to quarters temporarily. Jev suggests probing
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the now-revived Deanna [she remembers being scared and upset, but not what
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frightened her] to prove their innocence. Tarmin refuses to have anything to
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do with it, and Picard demurs, but Inad convinces him that they deserve that
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much of a chance. As Geordi and Data find correlations between comas on some
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of the planets and the Ullians' visits to them, Jev probes Troi, who relives
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the events of three nights previous--except that this time, the invader of
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her memories is not Jev, but *Tarmin*.
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Tarmin is monitored by both Jev and Inad, and Jev apologizes to Picard for
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his conduct, saying that what he has done is a grave crime in their society.
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(Tarmin is claiming innocence.) Data and Geordi, meanwhile, find from the
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last two planets' information that Tarmin was not on one of those worlds when
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several unexplained comas broke out. Jev goes to say goodbye to Deanna, but
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her kindness towards him causes him to lose control. He again invades her
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mind, this time coupling it with a physical assault--but Data and Worf show
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up in time to stop him. Tarmin, deeply grieved by his son's actions, tells
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the three victims [all now awake] that Ullia's best physicians will help them
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back on the road to full recovery.
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There. I hope that's everything. Now, let's see what I can figure out.
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I think I had my hopes set too high. I'm not sure what I was expecting, but
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I don't think this was really it. That doesn't mean it was bad, just
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jarringly unexpected. I'd be very curious to find out how much of the
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original script survived to here, and how much of "Violations" came in from
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rewrites.
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One definite problem with the presentation: by making sure we knew from the
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teaser onward that Jev was the bad guy, a lot of momentum was lost. There
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are many hints here and there along the way to set up Tarmin: beyond his
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arrogance and pushiness, there's his prodding of everyone to get their minds
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probed, and *especially* his "sometimes, with a beautiful woman, I cannot
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help myself [from being so forthright]". Had we just been given that, then
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the whole show would have been more of a puzzle, rather than an exercise in
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frustration at how they haven't figured it out yet. (No, I don't think this
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makes the crew idiots; it was obvious to us because it was set up that way.
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Their actions seemed reasonable enough.)
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However, two *good* things about the presentation come to mind. First, the
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visions themselves were well put together: dark, surreal, sharply cutting
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from one thing to another...simply maddening, all told. There's definitely a
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place for creative use of wide-angle lenses, and this was one of them. [BTW,
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the setting for Bev's flashback was particularly good--both she and Picard
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*looked* a good 18 years younger!] Second, there was a real...structure...to
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the plot, in that each of acts 1-4 ended in a vision [Troi, Riker, Bev,
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Troi-redux]. Something about that definitely worked.
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Something else about the flashbacks bothered me, however--it was *too*
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ambiguous. It's not made particularly clear how much of the memory-fragments
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were affected by Jev's interference. Is everything exactly as it was
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presented up until he takes someone's place, or were changes made earlier?
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And just *when* do Troi's and Riker's flashbacks take place? [Bev's is easy,
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naturally.] Troi's seems from the conversation to be very early in their
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mission on board, but Riker already has a beard--so it's at least a year.
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And what sort of emergency was happening in Engineering that we never heard
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about? I think there was definitely room for some ambiguity, but this was
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too much.
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[I was concerned, incidentally, about the treatment of Riker in Troi's
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flashback. The first time through, I thought he was being presented as
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almost assaulting her w/o Jev's interference, and that's a very worrisome
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thing. If we go by "everything was fine until Jev literally enters the
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picture", however, the real memory ends with Troi pushing Riker away after
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the one kiss--and presumably, Riker then agreed [grudgingly :-) ] that it was
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a bad idea. I think it could have been presented slightly more clearly than
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that--while I'm all for giving these guys more character flaws, having Riker
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be a rapist is *NOT* at all on the list.]
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But, again, there was a good ambiguity of sorts to counter this. While it's
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pretty clear that Jev's actions are conscious, willing acts, it's left very
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much in the air just how premeditated they were, and just how much he was
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consciously aware of them afterward. Certainly, his conduct during the
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investigation seemed one of genuine concern, not of "let's be a good boy and
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throw them off the track". He might well have been suppressing his *own*
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memories of the thing--ironic, that. His motives are a little bit unclear as
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well, but one can make good guesses.
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Characterization was, for the most part, pretty good. Not much was done with
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Picard, which is a pity; I agree with Bev in that he probably WOULD have some
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pretty intriguing memories to play with. One thing I also wanted to see was
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Picard's initial reaction while Troi is "replaying" her memory-flashback
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for Jev: since her words indicate at first that *Will* is the one doing the
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assault and not one of the Ullians, I think a suitable reaction is in order.
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Worf's memories might also have been interesting, particularly of Khitomer
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(although it might be a bit difficult for Jev to stick himself in there
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plausibly). But what we did see worked well enough. (Actually, I'd amend
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that--one thing bugged me. For Deanna only having been in a coma for a day,
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Riker's reaction in sickbay seemed considerably overboard. Maybe after
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several days, but they've had situations like this before. Whatever.)
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On to some other things--shorter ones.
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Scientifically...well, this *is* TNG. The Data/Geordi discussion about
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memory, while wonderful for the two characters, was basically false
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technobabble. [RNA? For *memory*? Not the way I remember learning it.
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Little things like synapses tend to be important...] The thalmus, though,
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does have a significant function in memory, so that part was all right. [My
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wife thinks that it might be crucial in processing short-term memory into
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long-term, but she wasn't sure. Me? I'm no biologist. :-) ]
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Meaningless treknology department: well, we had film evidence a ways back
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that 1000 stardates was a year ["Galaxy's Child" taking place "a little over
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a year" after "Booby Trap" fits the picture there], but here we have evidence
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that 1 stardate equals a day. [Troi's been out three days.] I think this
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leads us to the theory that it's a day *during* the course of a show, and
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that 1000 SD is a year overall. Man, those between-show stardates have to be
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mighty fast. :-)
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Random thoughts:
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--I liked Geordi's quote about "For some reason, I have NO recollection of
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how I spent my last birthday."
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--Deanna's story about how she copes with her mother, and how it doesn't work
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a bit, was nicely done as well.
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--My word, there *is* another doctor on the Enterprise! I actually thought
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rather highly of Dr. Martin in the little we saw of him--wonder if we'll be
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lucky enough to have him recur.
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--Music was mostly unremarkable, although I thought the music during the
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flashbacks was nicely eerie.
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--FX: nothing new to report here.
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And finally, the ending. I liked the final scene up to Tarmin's line about
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helping the victims recover from "this particular form of rape". The minute
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after that was pure proselytizing: violence is within us all, it can consume
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us if we don't keep watch on it, Earth used to be very violent but grew out
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of it, etc. I care very much about the issue of rape (as anyone remembering
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the Spock-Valeris discussion early last month can readily remember), but this
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was simply talking at us. I couldn't help being reminded of the ending of
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last night's "Dinosaurs": "Say no to drugs--and stop preachy sitcom endings
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like this one." :-)
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Well, I think I'm about done here. It was...interesting, and it was well put
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together in several ways. But somehow, it missed me. I'm mostly left saying
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"um...well, yeah, but...er...well?" [Any comments about how that's an
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improvement over my usual state will promptly be ignored. :-) ] So, I guess
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it's numbers time:
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Plot: 7. Straightforward, but solid.
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Plot Handling/Direction: 6. The handling of the main plot was considerably
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less, but the very snappy and eerie direction of the flashbacks
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themselves brought it back up.
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Characterization: 8. Not bad at all.
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TOTAL: 7--but I'm actually rounding *down* half a point for general
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ambience. Maybe I'm just grumpy. Either way, it's a 6.5.
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NEXT WEEK:
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The Enterprise sacrifices itself for a genetically perfect society?
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O-kayyyyyy....
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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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"Felicitous Natal Terran Rotational Cycle."
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--Data, hypothetically...
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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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